Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Vairagya: Non-Attachment to Shadow Narratives

Release attachment to the stories and identities we've constructed to avoid or justify our shadow aspects, enabling authentic integration.

Patan
Why It Matters

Vairagya, non-attachment and dispassion in Patanjali's system, involves releasing our grip on things we cling to—including our preferred self-image and the narratives we use to maintain it. Shadow work requires vairagya: we must detach from the story that we are purely good, purely logical, purely selfless. The ego constructs elaborate narratives to defend against shadow recognition: 'I'm not angry, I'm just passionate.' 'I'm not selfish, I'm just independent.' Vairagya invites us to hold these narratives lightly, recognizing them as protective fictions rather than truth. By non-attachment, we don't suppress the shadow but stop over-identifying with the defensive story. This creates freedom: we can acknowledge anger without being defined as an angry person; recognize selfishness without collapsing into shame. Patanjali's vairagya teaches that liberation comes not from perfection but from releasing our desperate grasp on a perfect image. Integration flourishes when we surrender the need to maintain a false self-portrait.

Helpful guides
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Mental Health
Peri
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