Patanjali's framework of the five psychological obstacles (ignorance, ego, attachment, aversion, fear) that undermine resilience when unrecognized and untransformed.
The Yoga Sutras identify five kleshas—fundamental afflictions of the psyche—that generate suffering and erode our capacity to adapt: avidya (ignorance), asmita (ego/I-am-ness), raga (attachment), dvesha (aversion), and abhinivesha (fear of death). Understanding these patterns is essential for resilience because they shape how we interpret challenges and determine our responses. Ignorance leads us to misread situations and lose perspective; unchecked ego makes us defensive and brittle; attachment to specific outcomes creates disappointment and failure; aversion causes us to flee problems rather than face them; and existential fear contracts our sense of possibility. Patanjali teaches that the path to resilience lies not in denying these patterns but in recognizing and gradually transforming them through practice and wisdom. This framework offers a psychological map unavailable in purely cognitive approaches. By identifying which kleshas activate during stress—Does my ego resist feedback? Do I catastrophize from fear?—we develop targeted practices to address the roots, not symptoms, of fragility. This leads to durable resilience grounded in genuine psychological transformation rather than coping techniques alone.
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