The practice of withdrawing energetic investment from distorted perceptions, preventing them from controlling your responses.
Pratyahara, the fifth limb of yoga, is the art of sense withdrawal—not suppressing sensations but ceasing to give them power. In the context of distortion, this means noticing the thought or anxious sensation without being swept into its narrative. When anxiety produces the sensation "I'm failing," pratyahara is the conscious decision to observe this sensation without feeding it energy or belief. Rather than fighting the distortion, you withdraw your identification from it. This is remarkably practical: the distorted thought still appears, but you are no longer tangled in it. Patanjali teaches pratyahara as the bridge between external reactivity and internal mastery. For cognitive distortions, this means developing the capacity to observe catastrophic thoughts, feelings of inadequacy, or self-critical loops without being controlled by them, creating space for choice and conscious response.
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