Patanjali's five kleshas illuminate the fundamental misconceptions from which protective parts originally crystallized.
The kleshas—ignorance, ego-identity, attachment, aversion, and fear of dissolution—are Patanjali's map of root obstacles in consciousness. These are not merely intellectual errors but deep, subliminal patterns that generate suffering. Applied to Internal Family Systems, the kleshas illuminate why parts form: ignorance (not seeing the wholeness beneath pain), ahamkara (mistaking the part-identity for the whole self), attachment (clinging to protective strategies), aversion (rejecting vulnerable experience), and abhinivesha (fear that if control is released, annihilation will follow). Most exiles formed because of kleshas—childhood ignorance about what was happening, aversion to overwhelming feeling, fear that pain meant permanent badness. Most protectors crystallized to defend against these kleshas. By recognizing kleshas as the root misunderstandings fueling part formation, practitioners can address the fundamental delusions beneath reactive patterns. This shifts work from behavioral management to addressing the deep misconceptions parts hold about reality, safety, and self—the true source of their rigidity and defensive necessity.
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