The yogic virtue of dispassionate witnessing—holding parts' stories lightly rather than being fused with their narratives or invested in fixing them.
Vairagya, the second pillar of Patanjali's practice (Yoga Sutras 1.12), is the quality of non-attachment or dispassion. This does not mean indifference or coldness, but rather the freedom that comes from not being entangled in outcome or identity. In parts work, vairagya is the capacity to meet an angry, protective, or desperate part with curiosity and compassion while remaining unhooked from its urgency to be believed, fixed, or obeyed. Many practitioners struggle because they are fused with their parts' perspectives—a critical part's verdict feels like absolute truth, a fearful part's catastrophe feels inevitable. Vairagya cultivates the internal space where you can hear a part fully without becoming it. This mirrors Self-leadership in IFS, where the Self remains calm, curious, and unblended even while deeply valuing and respecting each part's protective role. The Yoga Sutras suggest that this witnessing stance naturally erodes the compulsive power of mental patterns.
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