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Concept
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Avidya: False Beliefs Underlying Addictive Behavior

Patanjali identifies avidya (fundamental misunderstanding) as the root of all suffering; addiction stems from false beliefs about what substances/behaviors can provide.

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Why It Matters

Avidya—false knowledge or fundamental ignorance—is the first of Patanjali's five kleshas (afflictions) and the root cause of all psychological suffering. In addiction, avidya manifests as core false beliefs: that the substance provides genuine relief, that one cannot cope without it, that pleasure from the addictive behavior is real and lasting, or that one is fundamentally broken. These delusions drive compulsive behavior despite mounting evidence of harm. Patanjali's framework reveals addiction not as mere weakness but as a condition built on mistaken understanding. The mind has formed false associations and incorrect conclusions about reality. Recovery, then, requires systematic correction of these fundamental misbeliefs through direct experience and clear reasoning. Modern cognitive therapy mirrors this insight. By identifying and examining the specific avidyas operating in one's addiction—the false promises the substance makes, the incorrect beliefs about one's capacity—the practitioner can dismantle the psychological foundation of addictive conditioning at its deepest level.

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