The practice of withdrawing attention from reactive sensory inputs to interrupt automatic bias patterns and regain mental control.
Pratyahara, the fifth limb of yoga, describes conscious withdrawal of attention from habitual sensory reactions—a critical skill for managing biases that exploit our automatic processing. Most cognitive biases operate through reflexive sensory and emotional responses before conscious reasoning engages. By practicing pratyahara, we create deliberate gaps in this automatic chain, allowing biases like anchoring, framing effects, and emotional reasoning to lose their automatic power. This isn't suppression but strategic attention management: noticing when emotions hijack reasoning, when first impressions override evidence, when social cues override independent judgment. Pratyahara transforms bias management from correcting thinking errors into a proactive practice of sensory-emotional mastery. Through regular pratyahara practice, the mind becomes less reactive to triggering stimuli and more capable of choosing which inputs shape decisions.
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