Patanjali's concept of healthy detachment—releasing possessive clinging while maintaining genuine love—essential for secure, interdependent relationships.
Vairagya translates as non-attachment or dispassion, yet in Patanjali's framework it does not mean emotional coldness but rather freedom from desperate clinging. In attachment theory, this addresses anxious attachment's root: the belief that love requires possession and control. Vairagya teaches that paradoxically, we strengthen bonds by releasing our grip. Secure attachment involves loving someone fully while accepting their autonomy, mortality, and separate inner world. This reduces the anxiety-driven behaviors—jealousy, surveillance, manipulation—that damage relationships. The yoga tradition recognizes that attachment suffering stems from identifying love with control; vairagya dissolves this conflation. Applied to attachment healing, it means practicing trust in another's reliability without needing to micromanage their behavior. It enables mature love: passionate yet spacious, committed yet respecting freedom, deeply connected yet psychologically separate.
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