The cultivation of detachment from desires and cravings without suppression, allowing addicts to observe urges without compulsive reaction.
Vairagya is the complementary practice to abhyasa—the gradual loosening of attachment to objects of desire. In addiction treatment, vairagya means developing the capacity to notice cravings, urges, and emotional triggers without being pulled into reactive behavior. This is not about white-knuckling or suppressing desire, but rather observing it with equanimity as a temporary mental fluctuation. Patanjali teaches that vairagya develops naturally as one experiences the emptiness of fulfilled desires—the temporary high always fades. By training attention to distinguish between the impulse and the response, addicts create the psychological space necessary for choice. Vairagya transforms the addictive relationship: cravings are no longer enemies to battle but mental events to witness with compassionate detachment.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.