The paradoxical practice of releasing desperate attachment while paradoxically deepening intimacy through acceptance of impermanence.
Vairagya, often translated as detachment or dispassion, doesn't mean emotional coldness but rather freedom from desperate clinging. In adult relationships, anxious attachment often stems from trying to control or possess a partner, fearing loss. Patanjali's vairagya offers liberation: releasing the grip of fear-based attachment while remaining fully present. This means loving without needing to own, caring without requiring guarantees, and accepting that relationships inherently involve impermanence. When partners practice vairagya, paradoxically, connection deepens because it's no longer suffocated by anxiety and control. Trust replaces surveillance, vulnerability replaces defense. This concept invites attachment to transform from possessive need into mature love—choosing the person daily rather than clinging from fear. By releasing the demand that relationships be permanent or safe in absolute terms, we discover the genuine security that comes from acceptance, presence, and freedom. Vairagya teaches that the deepest bonds emerge when we stop strangling them.
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.