Intentional disengagement from outrage-designed media and algorithms to recover mental clarity and reduce political reactivity.
Pratyahara, the withdrawal of senses from external stimuli, becomes increasingly relevant in politics dominated by inflammatory media and algorithmic outrage. Political psychology documents how constant exposure to emotionally charged content hijacks citizens' nervous systems, triggering fight-or-flight responses that override rational deliberation. Patanjali teaches pratyahara as a deliberate practice: withdrawing attention from sensory stimulation to recover inner calm and discernment. In contemporary politics, this means intentionally limiting exposure to rage-engineered content, inflammatory partisan media, and algorithmically amplified division. A citizen practicing pratyahara might set media fasts, curate information sources intentionally, or practice digital sabbaths. This isn't escapism but strategic recovery of mental autonomy. When people interrupt the continuous loop of inflammatory stimuli, they regain capacity for nuanced thinking and ethical discernment. Pratyahara addresses the structural capture of political consciousness by commercial interests profiting from division.
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