Patanjali's five core mental obstacles adapted to gifted psychology: ignorance, ego, attachment, aversion, and fear of loss that undermine wellbeing despite achievement.
The klesas—ignorance, ego, attachment, aversion, and fear—are Patanjali's framework for understanding suffering's roots, applicable to gifted psychology's characteristic distortions. Avidya (ignorance) manifests as gifted students not knowing their authentic values, confusing aptitude with purpose. Asmita (ego) appears as identification with giftedness as identity. Raga (attachment) is desperate clinging to success, approval, and high achievement. Dvesha (aversion) is avoidance of challenge, failure, or domains where they don't immediately excel. Abhinivesha (fear of death/loss) shows as anxiety about losing gifted status or relevance. These five operate synergistically, creating the discontents of gifted life: the brilliant student who cannot fail, who doesn't know what they truly want, who exhausts themselves maintaining superiority. Patanjali teaches that recognizing these patterns is the first step to freedom. For gifted education, understanding the klesas validates that the psychological struggles gifted students face are not personal failures but universal patterns that can be observed and gradually released through practice and awareness.
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