Patanjali's five kleshas (ignorance, ego, attachment, aversion, fear) illuminate the psychological roots of emotional dysregulation and resistance to DBT skill practice.
The kleshas—avidya (ignorance), asmita (ego), raga (attachment), dvesha (aversion), and abhinivesha (fear of death/change)—are Patanjali's framework for understanding why humans suffer despite having capacity for freedom. These five obstacles directly illuminate emotional dysregulation: ignorance about emotion's nature, egoic identification with feeling-states, attachment to unwanted emotions, aversion that triggers avoidance, and fear preventing change. Many DBT clients exhibit klesha-based resistance: 'I can't change' (avidya), 'This emotion defines me' (asmita), 'I need to feel this way' (raga), 'I can't stand this feeling' (dvesha), 'Emotion regulation will make me numb' (abhinivesha). Patanjali teaches that recognizing these patterns—not fighting them but seeing them clearly—loosens their grip. DBT's psychoeducation about emotions accomplishes this: understanding emotion as biological-psychological process, not identity, addresses avidya and asmita. Recognizing attachment to suffering or aversion as the real problem shifts focus from symptom management to pattern recognition. For emotional dysregulation, this framework provides both diagnosis and pathway: the obstacles are not pathology but universal human patterns, and awareness itself begins liberation.
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