Patanjali's withdrawal of senses becomes a somatic anchor for African healing practices that use body awareness, herbal baths, and sensory rituals to heal psychological wounds.
Pratyahara, the yogic practice of withdrawing attention from external stimuli, finds its parallel in African healing ceremonies that use sensory immersion—sacred herbs, oils, and water—to redirect attention inward and away from sources of mental distress. This practice acknowledges that trauma lives in the nervous system and sensory pathways. African healers traditionally use sensory experiences like herbal steam baths, sacred oils, and rhythmic sound to recalibrate the nervous system toward safety and presence. Patanjali's framework helps explain the mechanism: by consciously withdrawing from external triggers and overstimulation, individuals regain agency over their perceptual field. In combining these approaches, African healing traditions gain a systematic method for teaching clients to recognize when they are overwhelmed and to deliberately shift their sensory attention toward healing resources. This creates a practical toolkit for managing hypervigilance, anxiety, and the sensory dysregulation that often accompanies psychological trauma in communities experiencing systemic distress.
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