The dual pillars of persistent effort and non-attachment that create sustained psychological transformation without ego-driven striving.
Patanjali teaches that lasting self-actualization requires both Abhyasa (dedicated practice) and Vairagya (non-attachment to outcomes). This framework directly challenges humanistic psychology's risk of ego-driven self-improvement, offering a balanced approach. Abhyasa provides the disciplined foundation for growth—consistent meditation, reflection, and skill development. Vairagya prevents the spiritual ego trap where self-improvement becomes another form of self-aggrandizement. Together, they create sustainable psychological development. Individuals practice transformation without clinging to results or measuring self-worth by achievement. This prevents perfectionism, performance anxiety, and the endless striving that blocks genuine self-actualization. The framework teaches that authentic growth emerges from committed action combined with philosophical surrender to process. In humanistic terms, this honors both agency and acceptance, effort and trust. This integration prevents burnout while maintaining psychological momentum toward authentic self-expression and meaningful development.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.