The capacity to release attachment to beliefs without judgment or force, the psychological state that allows old convictions to naturally dissolve.
Vairagya is often translated as non-attachment or dispassion, but more precisely it means the freedom from compulsive clinging—including clinging to beliefs. Patanjali teaches that beliefs persist partly because we're attached to them emotionally and psychologically; they feel safe or right, even when they limit us. Vairagya isn't cold detachment; it's a clear-eyed recognition of what a belief actually provides and what it costs. When we practice vairagya toward a limiting belief, we stop defending it as if it defines us, and we stop the emotional energy that keeps it alive. This creates space for the belief to naturally dissolve. Vairagya complements abhyasa: while abhyasa builds new beliefs through practice, vairagya creates the psychological freedom to let go of old ones. This principle explains why willpower alone rarely changes beliefs—intellectual effort can reinforce attachment. Instead, cultivating vairagya through meditation and witness-consciousness allows deep belief shifts without the exhaustion of constant struggle.
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