The practice of withdrawing attention from external threat-scanning and redirecting sensory focus inward, breaking anxiety's hypervigilance cycle.
Pratyahara—the withdrawal of the senses—is the often-overlooked fifth limb of yoga that directly addresses anxiety's hypervigilance pattern. Anxiety keeps attention outward, scanning the environment for danger: What are people thinking? What could go wrong? This external threat-focus keeps the nervous system activated. Pratyahara teaches systematic sensory internalization: progressively withdrawing attention from external stimuli and directing it toward internal sensations, breath, and subtle energy patterns. This is not dissociation or avoidance; it's a controlled redirect of the mind's focusing capacity. Through pratyahara practices (yoga nidra, body scans, sensory relaxation), you reclaim the ability to shift attention away from threat-scanning and toward safety and ease. This interrupts the anxiety loop at the perceptual level. Rather than fighting anxious thoughts, you simply redirect the sense organs inward, starving external hypervigilance of attention. Over time, pratyahara trains the mind to remain internally anchored rather than reflexively reactive to environmental stimuli, reducing the constant vigilance that exhausts and sustains chronic anxiety.
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