Patanjali's five kleshas (afflictions) provide a diagnostic framework for understanding the psychological suffering inherent in insecure attachment patterns.
The kleshas are five fundamental afflictions or distortions that Patanjali identifies as the root of human suffering: avidya (ignorance), asmita (ego-sense), raga (craving), dvesha (aversion), and abhinivesha (fear of death/annihilation). Together, they form the architecture of psychological suffering. Applied to attachment theory, the kleshas illuminate the specific suffering patterns in insecure attachment. Avidya manifests as not understanding your own attachment patterns or their origins. Asmita creates the false identities constructed around attachment wounds. Raga and dvesha drive the approach-avoidance cycles. Abhinivesha expresses as the fundamental fear of abandonment or engulfment that drives reactive attachment behaviors. Patanjali's framework suggests that attachment suffering isn't primarily about external circumstances but about these internal distortions. A person can have consistent, loving partners yet suffer if avidya prevents them from perceiving that security. The kleshas stack upon each other—ignorance of your patterns perpetuates the ego-defenses that maintain them. Attachment therapy, in this Yogic understanding, becomes a systematic process of identifying and gradually dissolving each klesha, revealing the secure relational capacity beneath the layers of distortion.
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