Patanjali's vairagya (non-attachment) frees practitioners from over-identifying with part narratives, creating space for Self-leadership and internal flexibility.
Vairagya, often translated as detachment or dispassion, is not coldness but liberation from false identification. Patanjali teaches that freedom arises when we stop clinging to mental patterns as truth. In IFS, many parts carry stories: "I am broken," "I am the protector," "I am unlovable." These identifications feel absolute from inside the part. Vairagya invites practitioners to hold these narratives lightly, to witness them without believing them completely. This is not denial but clarity. A part may have carried shame for decades; vairagya allows you to recognize the shame while remembering that you are not the shame. This subtle shift opens possibility. Patanjali understood that attachment to thought-patterns perpetuates suffering; release from attachment enables witness consciousness. In Parts work, vairagya becomes the ability to say, "This part believes this story, and I can hold that belief with compassion while remaining open to new possibilities." This non-attachment is the gateway to flexibility and healing.
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