Mental afflictions (klesha) including inherited karmic patterns and unmet ancestral obligations that create psychological burden until properly addressed and resolved.
Patanjali identifies klesha—the afflictions or obstacles to consciousness—including avidya (ignorance), asmita (ego), raga (attachment), dvesha (aversion), and abhinivesha (fear of death). African healing traditions recognize that mental distress often involves inherited klesha: karmic patterns carried through family lines, unfulfilled ancestral purposes, and obligations to those who came before. A person may experience inexplicable shame, compulsive behaviors, or depression that originates not in their own actions but in ancestral trauma or broken covenants. Western psychology, focused on individual genesis, misses this dimension entirely. This concept positions mental distress as potentially rooted in karmic inheritance and ancestral debt. Healing requires identifying which klesha belong to the individual and which are inherited burdens. African divination practices, ancestral consultation, and ritual resolution all serve to diagnose and address these patterns. By understanding that some mental afflictions require ancestral reconciliation rather than individual therapy, practitioners offer dignified, culturally consonant paths to liberation that honor both personal agency and relational responsibility.
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