Patanjali's five kleshas map directly onto attachment dysfunction, showing how ignorance, ego, craving, aversion, and fear perpetuate insecure patterns.
Patanjali identifies five fundamental kleshas (obstacles) that obscure consciousness: avidya (ignorance), asmita (ego), raga (craving), dvesha (aversion), and abhinivesha (fear of death). These map remarkably onto attachment dysfunction. Avidya manifests as fundamental misunderstanding of our lovability and needs. Asmita appears as false relational personas. Raga drives anxious attachment—desperate craving for reassurance and connection. Dvesha fuels avoidant attachment—aversion to intimacy and vulnerability. Abhinivesha appears as existential terror of abandonment. Patanjali's genius is recognizing these as universal human tendencies, not pathology, but obstacles to freedom requiring systematic attention. His eight-limbed path methodically addresses each klesha through ethical conduct, discipline, breath work, and meditation. For attachment healing, understanding the kleshas provides a comprehensive framework: rather than merely managing behaviors, we address root obstacles. We practice ethical relating (yama), discipline in emotional expression (niyama), and meditative awareness (dhyana) to progressively dissolve these patterns. This framework suggests attachment transformation involves methodical unraveling of fundamental misperceptions about self, other, and relationship.
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