The dual practice of sustained effort in internal work paired with non-attachment to outcomes, creating container for parts to transform naturally.
Patanjali teaches that yoga—the stilling of mental fluctuations—requires two complementary practices: abhyasa (continuous, devoted effort) and vairagya (non-attachment to results). This dyad is profoundly applicable to parts work. Abhyasa is the committed practice of internal dialogue, self-inquiry, and conscious witnessing of parts—showing up repeatedly with genuine interest. Vairagya is releasing attachment to how parts should change or what outcome we expect from them. Many parts workers exhaust themselves through forced effort without vairagya, demanding parts heal on a timeline. Conversely, purely detached vairagya without abhyasa becomes spiritual bypassing. The wisdom lies in balanced integration: genuine, sustained effort in building internal relationships (abhyasa) while holding a light, non-grasping attitude about how parts transform (vairagya). This creates the paradoxical container where parts feel genuinely met and supported yet free from pressure to perform or change. Patanjali's teaching suggests that parts naturally move toward integration when they experience this combination of devoted attention and spacious acceptance. This framework prevents the common pitfalls in parts work: burnout from over-effort or stagnation from passivity.
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