Patanjali's vairagya (non-attachment) teaches discernment between secure interdependence and the anxious clinging or dismissive distancing that characterizes insecure attachment.
Vairagya is often misunderstood as apathy, but Patanjali's Yoga Sutras define it as discriminative non-attachment—releasing desperate grasping while maintaining genuine care and connection. In attachment theory, vairagya illuminates the difference between secure attachment and insecure patterns. Securely attached individuals practice vairagya by holding relationships with love while maintaining healthy independence; they don't cling to reassurance or flee from intimacy. Anxiously attached people lack vairagya, desperately grasping for partners to validate their worth. Avoidantly attached individuals swing to rigid vairagya, detaching to avoid vulnerability. True vairagya balances commitment with freedom, presence with space. Patanjali teaches that this balanced non-attachment comes from trusting in something greater than individual need—perhaps self-worth, spiritual connection, or secure internal representation of the self. Practicing vairagya in relationships means loving without possession, being present without dependence, and allowing others autonomy while remaining emotionally connected.
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