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Glossary›Letting Go

Glossary

Letting Go

The practice of releasing attachment to thoughts, emotions, outcomes, or identities that cause suffering—central to Buddhism, Taoism, and modern psychology.

What is Letting Go?

Letting go refers to the deliberate practice of releasing psychological attachment to thoughts, emotions, desires, outcomes, or fixed identities. Unlike suppression or avoidance, letting go involves acknowledging what is present while ceasing the mental and emotional resistance that perpetuates suffering. The practice rests on the observation that human distress often stems not from circumstances themselves but from clinging to how things should be, who we think we are, or what we believe we must control.

In contemplative traditions, letting go is understood as a learnable skill rather than passive resignation. It requires distinguishing between appropriate action and unnecessary mental grasping—between caring for outcomes and being enslaved by them. A parent can work diligently to support a child’s wellbeing while letting go of rigid expectations about who that child should become.

Origins & Lineage

The concept appears across multiple wisdom traditions, though with different emphases. In early Buddhism (circa 5th century BCE), the Pali term vossagga describes relinquishment of craving, central to the Four Noble Truths. The Buddha taught that taṇhā (thirst or craving) binds consciousness to suffering, and that liberation requires releasing attachment to impermanent phenomena. The Majjhima Nikāya (Middle Length Discourses) instructs practitioners to abandon clinging to the five aggregates of experience.

Taoism, emerging in China between the 6th and 4th centuries BCE, emphasizes wu wei (effortless action) and releasing the need to force outcomes. The Tao Te Ching, attributed to Laozi, counsels: “In the pursuit of learning, every day something is acquired. In the pursuit of Tao, every day something is dropped.” This dropping represents letting go of conditioned patterns that obstruct natural harmony.

In Vedantic philosophy, vairāgya (dispassion) describes non-attachment to sense objects and ego-identifications, taught as preparatory to Self-realization. Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras (circa 400 CE) identify abhyāsa (practice) and vairāgya (non-attachment) as twin pillars of mastery over mental fluctuations.

Western psychology incorporated these concepts in the late 20th century. Psychologist David Hawkins published Letting Go: The Pathway of Surrender in 2012, describing a technique for releasing emotional resistance. Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), developed by Steven Hayes in the 1980s, teaches psychological flexibility through willingness to experience unwanted internal events without defense.

How It’s Practiced

Letting go manifests differently across contexts. In Vipassana meditation, practitioners observe sensations, thoughts, and emotions arising and passing without interference, training the capacity to release identification with mental content. When pain or desire appears, the instruction is to note it without clinging or aversion, allowing experience to move through awareness naturally.

In somatic practices, letting go involves releasing held tension in the body. Practitioners might notice clenched shoulders during stress and consciously soften them, recognizing how physical holding mirrors psychological grasping. Breathwork traditions use extended exhalations to activate parasympathetic relaxation, physiologically supporting release.

Hawkins’s surrender technique involves feeling an emotion fully while releasing the impulse to resist, change, or act on it—distinguishing between the feeling itself and the stories mind constructs around it. Practitioners report experiencing emotions as energy that dissipates when no longer fueled by resistance.

In 12-step recovery programs, letting go appears as “turning it over”—releasing the illusion of control over people, substances, or outcomes and acknowledging dependence on powers beyond ego.

Letting Go Today

Contemporary seekers encounter letting go through multiple channels. Ten-day Vipassana retreats in the S.N. Goenka tradition teach body-scanning practices designed to cultivate equanimity. Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR), developed by Jon Kabat-Zinn in 1979, brings release-oriented practices into medical settings for pain and anxiety management.

Yoga classes often include savasana (corpse pose), explicitly framed as practicing surrender. Somatic experiencing therapy, created by Peter Levine, helps trauma survivors release stored activation through titrated awareness and discharge.

Online teachers like Tara Brach integrate letting go with self-compassion practices, while Adyashanti’s teachings emphasize releasing spiritual concepts themselves. Psychedelic-assisted therapy increasingly incorporates surrender as central to therapeutic breakthroughs, with guides coaching clients to “let go” rather than control the experience.

Common Misconceptions

Letting go is not passivity or giving up appropriate effort. It does not mean tolerating abuse, abandoning responsibilities, or becoming indifferent. Parents letting go of controlling a teenager’s choices may simultaneously maintain clear boundaries about household rules.

It is not suppression. Pushing away unwanted feelings creates the tension letting go resolves. The practice involves feeling more, not less, while releasing the exhausting work of resistance.

Letting go does not require believing in any cosmology. While it appears in religious contexts, the basic mechanism—ceasing to fight with present-moment reality—requires no faith in karma, God, or universal intelligence.

Finally, letting go is not instantaneous or permanent. It is repetitive practice with specific attachments, not a single event that resolves all clinging forever.

How to Begin

For an experiential introduction, notice a minor irritation—traffic delay, spilled coffee, a critical comment. Observe the physical sensation of frustration in the body: chest tightness, jaw clenching, heat. Instead of changing or analyzing it, simply feel the sensation while breathing naturally. Ask: “Could I let this go?” not as mandate but as experiment. Notice whether the sensation softens when you stop insisting it shouldn’t be there.

For structured learning, Tara Brach’s guided meditations on “Radical Acceptance” provide accessible audio instruction. David Hawkins’s Letting Go offers a systematic method for working with emotions. For deeper immersion, a 10-day Vipassana retreat at a center in the Goenka tradition provides intensive training in non-reactive awareness. Those interested in somatic approaches might explore sessions with a Somatic Experiencing practitioner or tensegrity exercises from the Rolfing tradition.

Related terms

non attachmentsurrendervipassanawu weimindfulnessacceptance
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