The yogic practice of releasing emotional attachment to results while maintaining committed action, reducing anxiety and resistance that sabotage habit change.
Vairagya complements abhyasa in Patanjali's framework as the principle of non-attachment to outcomes and mental impressions. When building habits, emotional investment in immediate results often triggers frustration, abandonment, and relapse. Vairagya teaches practitioners to perform actions with full dedication while remaining psychologically detached from success or failure metrics. This paradoxical approach reduces the shame spirals and perfectionism that derail behavior change. By surrendering attachment to rapid transformation, individuals experience less stress and greater persistence through plateaus. Patanjali emphasizes that vairagya isn't indifference but rather equanimous engagement—doing the work because it's right, not for external validation. Applied to habit formation, vairagya liberates people from the emotional roller coaster of motivation, enabling steady progress even during difficult phases. This mental posture transforms behavior change from desperate striving into peaceful, sustainable practice.
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