Periagoge
Concept
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Pratyahara: Sensory Withdrawal and Emotional Clarity

The practice of withdrawing attention from external stimuli to observe internal emotional patterns and reduce reactivity to environmental triggers.

Patan
Why It Matters

Pratyahara, the fifth limb of yoga, involves consciously withdrawing sensory attention from external stimuli to direct awareness inward. This practice is transformative for emotional regulation because our emotions are continuously triggered by external inputs—news, social media, people's reactions, environmental stress. By deliberately practicing sensory withdrawal, we create temporary sanctuary from relentless external stimulation that fuels emotional reactivity. In this quieted state, we observe our baseline emotional patterns, conditioning, and habitual responses with clarity. This withdrawal is not escapism but rather strategic repositioning that allows us to see emotional patterns more objectively. As we strengthen our capacity for pratyahara through meditation and introspection, we develop the ability to selectively engage with external stimuli rather than being unconsciously reactive. This skill translates to real-world emotional regulation: we learn to pause external engagement, check our internal state, and respond consciously rather than being perpetually swept along by external demands.

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