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Kleshas: Cognitive-Emotional Obstacles to Belief Change

Kleshas are fundamental obstacles—ignorance, ego, attachment, aversion, and fear—that distort belief formation and prevent growth.

Patan
Why It Matters

Patanjali identifies five kleshas (afflictions) that cloud consciousness and distort beliefs: avidya (ignorance), asmita (ego-identification), raga (attachment), dvesha (aversion), and abhinivesha (fear of death/change). These aren't moral failures but inherent psychological tendencies that misshape how you form and cling to beliefs. Ignorance keeps you unaware of belief origins; ego makes you defend beliefs as identity; attachment bonds you to comfortable convictions; aversion pushes away threatening information; and fear of change resists new worldviews. Recognizing kleshas is crucial for belief transformation because they operate subtly, beneath conscious awareness. They explain why intelligent people hold contradictory beliefs and resist evidence. By identifying which kleshas sabotage your specific belief-change efforts—perhaps ego prevents admitting error, or aversion blocks uncomfortable truths—you can work directly with these obstacles. Patanjali's psychology shows that belief evolution requires not just thinking differently but healing the emotional-cognitive distortions that perpetuate old beliefs.

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