Strategic non-attachment to political positions enabling flexible, wisdom-based policy adaptation.
Vairagya, or non-attachment, offers political psychology a framework for transcending rigid ideological commitment. Political polarization intensifies when leaders and citizens identify their identity entirely with specific ideologies, making compromise feel like self-annihilation. Patanjali's teaching on vairagya suggests developing conscious distance from ideological positions—holding them skillfully without being possessed by them. This psychological stance enables political actors to evaluate policies on merit rather than tribal loyalty. Leaders practicing vairagya can adapt strategies as circumstances change without experiencing this as betrayal. Citizens practicing vairagya can engage across political divides without threat to core identity. This doesn't mean abandoning values but rather maintaining enough psychological space to question, listen, and evolve. Applied to political psychology, vairagya transforms politics from identity combat into pragmatic problem-solving where ideas serve human flourishing rather than ego investment.
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