Vairagya (non-attachment) distinguishes between anxious clinging and secure love, teaching how letting go of possessive control actually strengthens intimate bonds.
Vairagya is often misunderstood as indifference, but Patanjali means discernment and freedom from compulsive grasping. In attachment contexts, vairagya addresses the difference between secure interdependence and anxious fusion. Insecurely attached individuals often cling to partners out of fear of abandonment, creating suffocating dynamics. Vairagya teaches that we can deeply love and remain committed while honoring the autonomy of the other. This yogic wisdom parallels secure attachment research: secure individuals maintain healthy boundaries, respect their partner's independence, and trust the relationship's resilience without desperate control. Vairagya is not coldness but wise, spacious love—the capacity to hold someone close while allowing them freedom. This principle transforms attachment from a needy transaction into genuine relational maturity.
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