Patanjali's concept of non-attachment (vairagya) transforms CBT's cognitive work by teaching clients to observe thoughts without being controlled by them.
Vairagya—non-attachment or dispassionate observation—is Patanjali's antidote to over-identification with mental content. In CBT, clients often struggle with metacognitive awareness: they fuse with their thoughts, believing them as facts. Vairagya teaches practitioners to witness thoughts arising and passing without grasping or rejecting them. This shifts the therapeutic stance from 'change your thoughts' to 'observe your thoughts differently.' When a client recognizes their anxiety-driven thought as a mental fluctuation rather than truth, vairagya dissolves its power. Patanjali's framework suggests that psychological freedom comes not from perfect thoughts but from correct relationship with thinking itself. This elevates CBT beyond cognitive restructuring into genuine wisdom, where the practitioner develops stable awareness independent of thought content, creating psychological resilience that survives even when negative thoughts temporarily return.
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