The root ignorance (avidya) that perpetuates cultural idioms of distress by obscuring individual clarity beneath collective conditioning.
In Patanjali's system, avidya (fundamental ignorance) is not merely personal but deeply cultural. Cultural idioms of distress thrive within avidya—the forgetting that our emotional expressions are learned patterns rather than immutable truths. Cultures encode specific ways of experiencing anxiety, grief, shame, and failure, then present these as natural or inevitable. This ignorance prevents individuals from distinguishing between authentic emotional needs and culturally scripted suffering. By naming avidya as culturally conditioned, Patanjali's framework shows that liberation requires seeing through collective narratives that normalize particular forms of distress. Recognition of culturally inherited avidya becomes the first step toward authentic psychological transformation, allowing practitioners to question: Which of my suffering patterns are truly mine, and which are cultural inheritances I can release?
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