The yogic practice of releasing attachment to narratives about parental failure, allowing the inner child to grieve without remaining fused to blame.
Vairagya, the progressive dispassion or non-attachment taught in the Yoga Sutras, liberates the inner child from the grip of parental narratives. Many reparenting processes get stuck in anger, blame, or victim identity—forms of attachment that keep consciousness bound to the original wound. Through vairagya, the adult self acknowledges the truth of parental inadequacy without remaining emotionally fused to it. This is not forgiveness or minimization; it is releasing the energy drain of obsessive grievance. Patanjali teaches that freedom comes through non-reactivity, not suppression. The inner child can say: my parents were limited, I was harmed, AND I am not defined by their failures. This discriminative detachment creates space for authentic grief, agency, and new possibility. Vairagya allows reparenting to move from victim consciousness toward empowered self-authorship.
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