Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Abhyasa-Vairagya Balance: Effort and Release in Processing

The dynamic tension between abyasa (effort) and vairagya (release) encapsulates EMDR's paradoxical stance of active engagement paired with non-forced resolution.

Patan
Why It Matters

Patanjali teaches that both abhyasa (dedicated practice and effort) and vairagya (non-attachment and surrender) are necessary for transformation; neither alone suffices. This polarity profoundly mirrors EMDR's therapeutic mechanism. The therapist and client must bring deliberate effort: identifying the target, installing resources, and maintaining focus during bilateral stimulation. Yet paradoxically, healing emerges not through force but through release—allowing the nervous system's own wisdom to process and resolve the trauma. Many trauma survivors become stuck trying to think their way out of trauma or by applying excessive will to overcome symptoms. EMDR's framework teaches that while effort is necessary to maintain the processing window, the actual resolution emerges through letting go: trusting the brain's adaptive processes, allowing emotions and insights to surface organically, and accepting whatever emerges without forcing a particular outcome. This abhyasa-vairagya balance prevents both the passivity of avoidance and the burnout of excessive forcing. Clients learn to bring intention and consistency while simultaneously surrendering to the process, mirroring Patanjali's understanding that lasting transformation requires holding both effort and release simultaneously.

Helpful guides
Patan
Mental Health
Peri
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The Examined Path Through EMDR and trauma processing
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