The practice of releasing attachment to beliefs, creating psychological space for new perspectives and transformation.
Vairagya is non-attachment or dispassionate objectivity—the ability to hold beliefs lightly rather than clutching them as identity. Most people defend their beliefs fiercely because they've merged identity with ideology; the belief becomes 'who I am' rather than 'what I currently think.' Patanjali teaches that vairagya is the complement to abhyasa: while repetition builds beliefs, detachment allows us to examine and release them. By cultivating vairagya, we create psychological distance from our convictions, observing them as objects of awareness rather than absolute truths. This distance is liberating because it means a belief can change without threatening our fundamental identity. Vairagya doesn't mean apathy; rather, it means holding beliefs provisionally, staying curious about alternatives, and remaining willing to revise our understanding. This detached stance transforms belief formation from a defensive process into an open exploration of truth.
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