Persistent practice combined with wise non-attachment transforms entrenched protective parts and allows their gradual release.
Patanjali identifies two complementary forces: abhyasa (consistent, devoted practice) and vairagya (non-grasping detachment). In IFS work, many parts are rigid precisely because we grip them—resisting, judging, or obsessing over their protective strategies. Abhyasa means returning again and again to the internal landscape, building relationship with protective parts through session work, journaling, and daily mindfulness without abandoning the effort. Vairagya means releasing the white-knuckle need for parts to change immediately, accepting their current protective role while inviting evolution. Together, these principles create the exact conditions IFS needs: sustained compassionate attention without coercive force. A firefighter part that numbs pain through dissociation loosens its grip not through shame-driven force, but through consistent, non-demanding presence—abhyasa meeting vairagya—allowing the part to trust that safety exists without its exhausting vigilance.
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