Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Vairagya: Non-Grasping Love

The paradoxical yogic principle of non-attachment that frees partners from possessive fear while deepening genuine intimacy.

Patan
Why It Matters

Vairagya, often translated as dispassion or non-attachment, is Patanjali's counterpoint to abhyasa—the art of releasing grasping while maintaining commitment. Many people confuse secure attachment with control: holding tighter to prevent abandonment. Vairagya inverts this. By releasing the fearful grip on your partner—relinquishing demands that they complete you, never change, or prove your worth—you paradoxically strengthen the relationship. This doesn't mean emotional distance; it means loving without desperation. Patanjali understood that the mind's suffering stems from craving and aversion. In romantic attachment, vairagya means accepting that your partner is ultimately independent, that loss is possible, and that you are already whole. This psychological freedom allows genuine presence rather than protective strategies. Partners practicing vairagya show up fully without needing the other person to be a certain way, transforming attachment from anxious possession into secure, spacious love.

Helpful guides
Patan
Mental Health
Peri
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