Non-attachment to painful narratives and colonial identities as a liberation practice, enabling psychological freedom within systemic constraint.
Vairagya—dispassionate detachment or non-grasping—is often misunderstood as cold renunciation, but Patanjali teaches it as freedom from clinging to false identities and limiting stories. In African healing for mental distress, vairagya addresses how internalized oppression, shame, and colonized self-perception perpetuate suffering. When individuals grip tightly to narratives of unworthiness, victimhood, or inferiority, these become habitual mental patterns that generate constant distress. Vairagya invites practitioners to witness these stories without identifying as them: you are not your trauma, not your colonizer's judgment, not society's devaluation. African spiritual traditions teach similar detachment through understanding that the true self—the spirit, the essential essence—remains untouched by external violation. By cultivating vairagya, individuals can release the psychological weight of oppressive identities while still honoring historical truth. This creates psychological space for agency, dignity, and reconnection with authentic selfhood rooted in spiritual heritage rather than systemic damage.
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