The five afflictions in yoga philosophy as nervous system patterns that generate suffering when dysregulated or unresolved.
Patanjali identifies five kleshas (afflictions): ignorance, egoism, attachment, aversion, and fear of death. These are not merely psychological but are deeply rooted in nervous system patterning. When the vagal system is dysregulated, these afflictions intensify: ignorance becomes inability to sense present safety; egoism becomes defensive rigidity; attachment and aversion drive sympathetic grasping or dorsal vagal shutdown; fear of death becomes existential panic rooted in survival-mode activation. The kleshas represent the ways dysregulated nervous systems distort perception and generate unnecessary suffering. By understanding the nervous system substrate of the kleshas, practitioners recognize that yogic practices targeting vagal regulation directly address these deep patterns. As ventral vagal tone stabilizes and the nervous system finds genuine safety, the kleshas naturally diminish—not through intellectual effort but through somatic reality. A regulated nervous system perceives more accurately, responds more freely, and experiences less existential suffering. The kleshas become visible as defensive patterns rather than truth, and this clarity itself becomes liberation.
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