Patanjali's dual principle of consistent practice paired with non-attachment, essential for addiction recovery as sustained effort without desperate grasping.
Yoga Sutra 1.12 states mastery requires both abhyasa (continuous, dedicated practice) and vairagyam (non-attachment to results). For addiction recovery, this creates a paradoxical formula: sustain recovery effort without white-knuckling desperation. Many recovery programs emphasize willpower and control, creating rigid resistance that paradoxically intensifies cravings. Conversely, some approaches encourage surrender that becomes passivity. Patanjali's framework integrates both. Abhyasa means showing up daily to recovery practices—meditation, therapy, community—with genuine commitment. Vairagyam means releasing the outcome-obsession that creates anxiety and triggers relapse. The practitioner practices intensely yet holds results lightly. This reduces the psychological pressure-valve that builds toward relapse. When individuals stop white-knuckling control and instead cultivate spacious, non-desperate practice, the nervous system downregulates. Addiction thrives in oscillation between rigid control and desperate surrender. The abhyasa-vairagyam balance creates a third way: committed practice without pathological attachment to perfection.
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