Patanjali's fifth limb teaches conscious disengagement from sensory overload, providing theoretical grounding for DBT's TIPP and self-soothing skills.
Pratyahara, the withdrawal of senses, is Patanjali's antidote to sensory-emotional overwhelm. When dysregulated, the nervous system is hijacked by sensory input—harsh lights, loud voices, physical tension—which fuels emotional escalation. Pratyahara is not avoidance but conscious modulation: intentionally withdrawing attention from triggering sensory experiences and redirecting it inward. This ancient practice validates DBT's TIPP skills (Temperature, Intense exercise, Paced breathing, Paired muscle relaxation), which interrupt dysregulation through sensory intervention. Pratyahara offers deeper understanding: these aren't mere distraction techniques but deliberate disengagement from sensory hijacking of emotion. Patanjali teaches that the senses naturally pull awareness outward; pratyahara returns agency to the practitioner. For those with emotional dysregulation, this means consciously choosing when to expose yourself to sensory input and when to withdraw—using environment, posture, and breath to create the internal conditions for emotional stability. Pratyahara transforms symptom management into yogic mastery.
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