Vairagya is the yogic principle of non-grasping detachment; in relationships it means loving fully while releasing the need to control outcomes or possess your partner.
Vairagya is often misunderstood as indifference, but Patanjali teaches it as wise non-grasping—the freedom that comes from releasing desperate need while maintaining genuine care. In adult relationships, vairagya addresses the deepest attachment wound: the fear that love requires ownership or control. Partners practicing vairagya can cherish each other without needing constant reassurance, without monitoring, without fusion. This creates paradoxical security: as each person releases their grip, both feel safer. Vairagya doesn't mean emotional distance; rather, it's the confidence that comes from knowing your worth isn't dependent on your partner's behavior. The practice involves cultivating faith in impermanence—acknowledging that all relationships transform and end, which paradoxically makes presence sweeter. Couples who embody vairagya experience true intimacy because they're together by choice, not compulsion.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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