The five afflictions (klesas) reveal how misidentification and false beliefs perpetuate insecure attachment patterns and relational pain.
Patanjali identifies five klesas—fundamental afflictions: avidya (ignorance), asmita (egoic identification), raga (craving), dvesha (aversion), and abhinivesha (fear of death). These klesas underlie all human suffering, including attachment wounds. Insecure attachment emerges from avidya—the fundamental misunderstanding that we are separate, unlovable, or unsafe. Asmita appears as identification with our attachment style: 'I am anxious' or 'I am avoidant' rather than recognizing these as conditioned patterns. Raga manifests as desperate craving for reassurance; dvesha as pushing away closeness to avoid pain; abhinivesha as the unconscious terror that relational loss means death. Modern attachment theory documents these same patterns—how early wounds create false beliefs about lovability and safety that persist despite contradictory evidence. The yogic path offers systematic methods to gradually dissolve klesas through witness consciousness, revealing our fundamental wholeness beneath attachment conditioning. This perspective suggests that secure attachment develops not by managing behaviors but by uprooting the false beliefs and identifications that perpetuate insecure patterns.
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