Patanjali's pratyahara—conscious withdrawal of the senses—provides a practical technique for interrupting the sensory-craving loop that drives addictive behavior.
Pratyahara, the fifth limb of yoga, is the practice of deliberately withdrawing attention from external sensory stimuli and internal reactive patterns. In addiction, the senses become conditioned to trigger cravings: the sight of a substance, the sound of certain music, the smell of a familiar location—all activate neural reward circuits. Pratyahara teaches practitioners to consciously disengage from these sensory inputs before they cascade into craving and action. This isn't avoidance but skillful sensory management: one learns to notice triggers without allowing attention to follow them into compulsive pathways. Practically, this involves techniques like shifting focus inward, controlling environmental exposure, and developing sensory awareness that creates space between stimulus and response. By mastering the senses through pratyahara, individuals gain autonomy from external and internal cues that previously seemed irresistible, addressing the automatic nature of addictive behavior.
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