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Kleshas and Trauma's Root Patterns

Patanjali's five afflictions explain the fundamental psychological patterns underlying traumatic reactions and how EMDR addresses their roots.

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Why It Matters

The kleshas—avidya (ignorance), asmita (false self), raga (attachment), dvesha (aversion), and abhinivesha (fear of death)—are Patanjali's analysis of consciousness's core conditioning patterns. Trauma activates all five: ignorance of safety, a fragmented identity, desperate attachment to control, violent aversion to triggers, and primordial fear of annihilation. EMDR addresses kleshas by allowing the nervous system to update its worldview through direct experience. During bilateral reprocessing, old beliefs ("I'm unsafe," "I'm broken," "the world is dangerous") are held alongside new information from present-moment resources. The brain gradually revises avidya—the fundamental ignorance sustaining the trauma pattern. The false self constructed to survive (rigid, hypervigilant, compliant) softens as the true self reclaims capacity. Attachments to protective strategies loosen; aversions to triggers decrease; the primal fear of death or dissolution gradually contextualizes. Patanjali's framework reveals that trauma isn't merely a memory problem but a fundamental distortion of how consciousness perceives reality itself. EMDR's genius is reprocessing this perceptual foundation, correcting the kleshas at their source.

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