Periagoge
Concept
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Abhyasa and Vairagyam for Attachment Change

The complementary practices of persistent effort (abhyasa) and non-attachment (vairagyam) as the dual mechanism for transforming insecure attachment patterns.

Patan
Why It Matters

Patanjali identifies two essential principles for sustained transformation: abhyasa (consistent practice over long time) and vairagyam (non-grasping detachment). Attachment healing requires both. Abhyasa demands that individuals commit to practices—secure communication, emotional regulation, vulnerable disclosure—repeatedly, patiently, for years if necessary. Without abhyasa, insight alone changes nothing; attachment patterns were built through years of reinforcement and require years of re-patterning. Simultaneously, vairagyam prevents the toxic grasping that perpetuates insecure attachment. An anxiously attached person practicing abhyasa but clinging desperately for quick results (lacking vairagyam) intensifies suffering. Vairagyam doesn't mean not caring; it means releasing the death-grip demand that relationships fulfill voids or prove worth. The paradox: secure attachment emerges precisely when we practice diligently while remaining inwardly detached from outcomes. Parents practice consistent attunement (abhyasa) while surrendering their child's specific path (vairagyam). Partners communicate authentically (abhyasa) while releasing control over partner's response (vairagyam). This framework explains why willpower alone fails—it lacks vairagyam's spacious surrender that actually enables the nervous system to reorganize.

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Mental Health
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