There’s a pattern running through this week that has nothing to do with asana. It’s about what happens when your nervous system becomes a data point—and what yoga practice offers in response.
Start with the divide between those who build algorithmic systems and those who get processed by them. One group sets parameters. The other gets reduced to inputs and outputs. Then look at Gen Z women drowning in anxiety—forty percent wanting to leave the country, a third anxious almost all the time. Economic precarity, climate doom, and the relentless hum of being constantly online. The nervous system doesn’t distinguish between being surveilled by an algorithm and being overwhelmed by information. Both turn you into something passive.
Which brings us to overstimulation—when even pranayama feels unmerciful, when dinner sounds like nails on a chalkboard. Your body is trying to tell you something. Meanwhile, 11 studies show yoga literally changes brain structure—greater volume in regions governing memory, planning, and emotional processing. The combination of movement, breath, and sustained attention stimulates growth in parts that shrink under stress.
This matters because pratyahara—sense withdrawal—isn’t about escaping the world. It’s about reclaiming agency over what gets in. Growth shows up in how we look back at our past judgments with more compassion. And if you’re wondering where to start, the books that actually matter are the ones that change how you practice, not just what you know.
Yoga practice makes you a subject again. That’s the whole point.
