The kleshas are five fundamental mental afflictions—ignorance, egoism, attachment, aversion, and fear—that generate and sustain limiting beliefs.
The kleshas are the five root afflictions or obstacles in consciousness: avidya (ignorance), asmita (ego-identification), raga (attachment), dvesha (aversion), and abhinivesha (fear of annihilation). These aren't moral failures but psychological patterns that distort perception and generate false beliefs. Asmita creates beliefs about your fixed identity; raga generates beliefs that certain things will fulfill you; dvesha creates beliefs that certain things must be avoided; abhinivesha produces beliefs rooted in existential fear. Understanding the kleshas reveals the psychological mechanisms behind your beliefs. Rather than treating beliefs as isolated thoughts, you can trace them to deeper emotional and survival patterns. This is transformative because you're not fighting beliefs intellectually but addressing the underlying klesh driving them. For instance, a belief "I'm not good enough" likely stems from asmita (misidentified self) or abhinivesha (survival anxiety). By addressing the root klesh through practice, the belief naturally releases. The Yoga Sutras teach that all suffering and delusion stem from the kleshas, making their recognition and gradual dissolution central to belief transformation and psychological freedom.
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