Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Vairagya: Non-Attachment Release

Vairagya, the practice of conscious non-attachment, offers addicted individuals a psychological pathway to release dependency without suppression or denial.

Patan
Why It Matters

Vairagya, often translated as non-attachment or dispassion, represents the complementary practice to abhyasa in Patanjali's system. Rather than forcing abstinence through willpower, vairagya cultivates a fundamental shift in relationship to addictive substances or behaviors—seeing them with clarity rather than desire. This is not cold rejection but mature understanding: recognizing how addiction diminishes authentic freedom and wellbeing. For someone struggling with addiction, vairagya develops through deepening awareness of consequences and costs—both visible and subtle. As mindfulness practice reveals how addiction creates suffering, genuine non-attachment naturally emerges. This differs from white-knuckling abstinence; instead, it's a psychological reorganization where the addicted object loses its magnetic pull. Patanjali's wisdom suggests that true recovery involves both positive practice (abhyasa) and genuine dispassion (vairagya) working together. When someone practices consistently while also cultivating honest awareness of addiction's destructiveness, the compulsion gradually transforms into genuine choice and freedom from the substance or behavior itself.

Helpful guides
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