The practice of withdrawing attention from external stimuli and anxious sensations, allowing the nervous system to reset and recalibrate threat perception.
Pratyahara, the fifth limb of yoga, involves conscious withdrawal of the senses from external objects and internal bodily sensations. For anxiety, this creates crucial relief: constant scanning of the environment and body for threat maintains hypervigilance. Pratyahara practices—such as yoga nidra or systematic relaxation—deliberately rest this surveillance system. By turning attention inward with gentle awareness rather than anxious monitoring, pratyahara trains the nervous system that it is safe to relax watchfulness. Patanjali understood that the senses and mind are exhausted by constant reactivity; pratyahara provides sanctuary. Modern anxious individuals are rarely taught to simply disengage from sensory input and worry-loops; pratyahara offers permission and technique. This withdrawal is not avoidance but a deliberate metabolic rest that allows anxiety to naturally discharge and the nervous system to recalibrate baseline threat-sensitivity downward.
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