The practice of withdrawing sensory attention inward, protecting emotional regulation capacity from external triggers and stimulation overload.
Pratyahara, the fifth limb of Patanjali's system, refers to withdrawing the senses from external objects—not in dissociative avoidance but in controlled redirection of attention inward. This practice recognizes that emotions are heavily amplified by constant sensory stimulation from media, social comparison, and environmental triggers. By deliberately withdrawing sensory focus, practitioners reduce the raw material feeding emotional reactivity. Modern emotional regulation faces unique challenges from stimulation excess: endless notifications, social media, news cycles, and designed addictive technologies constantly trigger emotional responses. Pratyahara offers a countermeasure through deliberate sensory discipline. This doesn't mean hermitage but conscious choice about what information and stimuli you allow past your sensory gates. A practitioner might limit news consumption, curate social media, or create technology-free times, recognizing these as legitimate emotional regulation tools. This practice particularly benefits those with anxiety or overwhelm, as it reduces the constant threat-scanning that hyperactive nervous systems perform. By regulating sensory input, practitioners create conditions where deeper emotional regulation work becomes possible and sustainable.
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