5th Limb · Bahiraṅga · the bridge

The Turning Inward — where the senses stop reaching outward.

Pratyāhāra · pratyāhāra

Root: prati (against, back) + āhāra (intake, that which is taken in — the same root as “food”) — “drawing the intake backward.” One-line: the turning inward.

sva-viṣaya-asaṃprayoge cittasya svarūpānukāra ivendriyāṇāṃ pratyāhāraḥ
“When the senses no longer engage their own objects, and instead follow the nature of the mind itself — that is pratyāhāra.” Its fruit (II.55): from this, supreme mastery over the senses.
Yoga Sūtras II.54

What is Pratyāhāra

The fifth limb — the hinge

The last of the five bahiraṅga limbs, and structurally the hinge of the whole system. Everything up to this point has concerned the practitioner's relationship to the outer world — conduct, posture, breath. Pratyāhāra is where that orientation turns: the senses stop reaching for their objects and start, instead, to follow the mind inward.

It doesn't yet arrive anywhere — Dhāraṇā, Dhyāna, and Samādhi still lie ahead — but it's the moment the direction of travel changes.

In the Ashtanga Tradition

A consequence of absorption

Consistent with how this lineage treats most of the subtler limbs, pratyāhāra isn't taught as an isolated technique. It's described as something that happens as a consequence of full absorption in breath, bandha, and dṛṣṭi — when those three are genuinely occupying attention, the pull of a phone buzzing outside the room, or a neighbour's practice, simply has less to grab onto.

Practising It

Somewhere for the eyes to rest

On the mat, dṛṣṭi — the fixed gaze point specific to each posture — is pratyāhāra in its most literal, trainable form: the eyes are given somewhere to rest so they stop wandering to whoever's next to you. Off the mat, it's the small, repeatable choice not to follow the reflexive reach for a phone the instant a thought or notification arrives.