The practice of redirecting attention inward from external stimuli, essential for accessing internal parts and their sensory experiences without external distraction.
Pratyahara, sensory withdrawal, is the fifth limb of yoga where attention turns from external objects toward internal experience. This is not dissociation but conscious redirection of the senses inward. For Parts work, pratyahara is foundational: clients must move attention away from external responsibilities and defensive busyness toward the internal landscape where parts exist. Many clients are arrested in pratyahara—unable to sense their parts because consciousness is constantly captured by external threats or tasks. Patanjali teaches that pratyahara precedes dharana (concentration) and dhyana (meditation). In IFS terms, pratyahara is the prerequisite for accessing parts. When clients withdraw sensory attention from constant environmental scanning, they become available to feel body sensations, emotions, and the subtle presence of different parts. Pratyahara practice trains the nervous system that internal attention is safe, gradually building trust that turning inward won't expose them to danger. This internal focus allows parts to communicate through sensation, emotion, and imagery that external attention would override.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.