Sustained practice (abhyasa) paired with non-attachment (vairagyam) creates stable transformation in how you relate to others and yourself.
Patanjali identifies two essential pillars for transformation: abhyasa (dedicated, consistent practice) and vairagyam (non-attachment to outcomes). In attachment work, abhyasa means repeatedly practicing secure behaviors, even when your conditioned patterns want to reassert themselves—consistent emotional regulation, honest communication, boundary maintenance. Vairagyam means releasing the desperate need for specific relationship outcomes, accepting what unfolds while maintaining your integrity. This combination prevents both avoidant abandonment of relationships and anxious clinging for control. The sophos teaches that genuine secure attachment emerges not from forcing outcomes but from committed practice without desperate attachment to results. This paradox—practicing deeply while holding lightly—addresses the core paradox of attachment: you must care deeply about relationships while accepting their uncertainty. Together, abhyasa and vairagyam build sustainable relational transformation.
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