Patanjali's taxonomy of mental afflictions including ignorance and fear, mapping the psychological root structures underlying anxiety.
The kleshas are five fundamental mental afflictions: avidya (ignorance of reality), asmita (false ego/identity), raga (craving), dvesha (aversion), and abhinivesha (fear of death and change). Anxiety emerges from this layered structure. At the deepest level, abhinivesha—existential fear—fuels the body's hypervigilance and threat-detection system. Avidya creates misperceptions of danger; asmita attaches identity to anxious thoughts; raga and dvesha drive avoidance and compulsive seeking. Patanjali's diagnostic model illuminates why anxiety treatment must address multiple levels simultaneously—cognitive reframing alone cannot resolve existential dread, just as breathing exercises alone cannot shift deep-held false beliefs about self. This framework guides integrated treatment: combine philosophical inquiry with somatic practice, existential work with behavioral change, and self-inquiry with grounding techniques.
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