Sense withdrawal (pratyahara) enables safe internal exploration of attachment trauma stored in body sensations and emotions.
Pratyahara, the fifth limb of Patanjali's yoga, involves consciously withdrawing attention from external stimuli to explore internal sensation and emotion. This practice is particularly valuable for attachment healing because attachment injuries are encoded in the body's defensive patterns—tension, numbness, hypervigilance, or collapse. Most insecurely attached individuals live externally focused, constantly monitoring others' faces, voices, and moods for safety cues. Pratyahara creates safe containment to turn inward and discover what's actually present—grief, rage, longing, or profound emptiness. Through gentle body scanning and sensory awareness, individuals develop curiosity about their somatic attachment patterns rather than staying identified with them. This creates the foundation for secure relating: a capacity to recognize one's internal state independently of others' responses. As pratyahara deepens, the nervous system learns it can survive feeling abandoned sensations without being destroyed, gradually releasing protective bracing that kept insecure attachment patterns in place.
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