Patanjali's vairagya (non-attachment) teaches releasing the compulsive craving and emotional investment in addictive substances or behaviors, essential for psychological freedom.
Vairagya represents a special kind of detachment—not emotional numbness but a conscious release of craving and attachment to temporary satisfactions. For addiction recovery, vairagya means gradually decreasing the emotional charge and perceived necessity of the addictive substance or behavior. Patanjali teaches that vairagya develops naturally through wisdom: as practitioners understand how addiction causes suffering and prevents genuine happiness, attachment diminishes organically. This is distinct from forced abstinence; vairagya is a psychological shift where the addictive substance loses its psychological magnetism. Through meditation and philosophical reflection on impermanence, individuals recognize that temporary relief through addiction actually deepens suffering. Vairagya cultivates the understanding that true contentment comes from internal states—peace, clarity, connection—rather than external chemical or behavioral fixes. This wisdom-based detachment addresses addiction at its psychological root rather than merely suppressing symptoms.
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