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Concept
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Klesha: The Five Suffering-Based Patterns Driving Parts

Patanjali's five kleshas (afflictions) identify root patterns—ignorance, ego, attachment, aversion, and fear—that drive all protective and exiled parts.

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Why It Matters

Patanjali describes five kleshas or afflictions: avidya (ignorance), asmita (ego), raga (attachment/craving), dvesha (aversion/rejection), and abhinivesha (fear of death). These fundamental patterns generate all suffering and psychological dysfunction. In Internal Family Systems, the kleshas illuminate why parts adopt their protective roles. A manager part might operate from avidya (ignorance about the exile's capacity to heal) and abhinivesha (fear that acknowledging pain means annihilation). A firefighter part operates from raga (craving numbing escape) and dvesha (rejecting pain at all costs). An exile carries the wounds these patterns were designed to protect. Understanding the kleshas as root patterns rather than personal failures transforms how practitioners work with parts. Instead of viewing them as obstacles, we recognize them as ancient survival strategies. By gently illuminating how each part operates through one or more klesha patterns, we create compassionate awareness. The Self, in contrast, operates from clarity, non-attachment, and acceptance. IFS work progressively loosens the grip of klesha-driven part logic, allowing Self-leadership to emerge.

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