Patanjali's framework of five mental distortions directly maps onto C-PTSD's psychological obstacles, providing a diagnostic language for trauma patterns.
The klesas—Patanjali's five fundamental obstacles (ignorance, ego, attachment, aversion, fear of death)—reveal the deep structure of complex trauma psychology. Avidya (ignorance) manifests as traumatized survivors not recognizing their own agency and resilience. Asmita (ego/false self) appears as hypervigilant, protective identities constructed to prevent retraumatization. Raga (craving) manifests as addictive patterns seeking temporary escape from internal pain. Dvesha (aversion) emerges as avoidance strategies that trap survivors in isolation. Abhinivesha (fear of annihilation) underlies existential terror in C-PTSD. Patanjali's genius is showing these aren't character flaws but conditioned patterns rooted in misperception. Recognizing them as klesas—obstacles, not identity—creates psychological distance and choice. For trauma survivors, naming these patterns through yogic lens dignifies their pain while making healing possible. Rather than shame ('I'm broken'), survivors understand 'My mind developed specific protective patterns in response to unbearable circumstances.' This reframe transforms klesas from character pathology into treatable conditioning patterns responding to systematic practice.
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