Five psychological afflictions (ignorance, ego, desire, aversion, clinging) that generate existential suffering and death anxiety.
Patanjali identifies five Kleshas—psychological afflictions—as the root of all suffering, including existential dread: Avidya (ignorance), Asmita (ego), Raga (craving), Dvesha (aversion), and Abhinivesha (fear of death itself). These are not moral failures but fundamental misperceptions about the nature of reality and self. Avidya mistakes the temporary for the permanent; Asmita confuses personality for essence; Raga and Dvesha perpetually chase and reject; Abhinivesha clings to existence out of unconscious death denial. In existential psychology, the Kleshas explain why humans construct elaborate meaning-systems to avoid confronting mortality. Understanding these five patterns is diagnostic: they reveal how psychological mechanisms generate existential anxiety. Patanjali's genius is that he does not condemn these patterns but offers precise methods to unweave them. By systematically addressing each Klesha through meditation and self-inquiry, practitioners gradually disentangle themselves from the psychological machinery generating existential fear, accessing authentic freedom.
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