The distinction between afflicted and unafflicted mental states, fundamental to diagnosing and treating Ayurvedic psychological disturbance.
Patanjali identifies klisha (afflicted, colored by obstacles) and aklisha (unobstructed, free) as two fundamental mental conditions. This framework revolutionizes Ayurvedic mental health assessment: psychological disturbance isn't merely dosha imbalance but the presence of kleshas—deep mental obstructions including ignorance, ego, attachment, aversion, and fear. Each klesha manifests through specific dosha patterns: Vata expresses as fear and fragmentation, Pitta as aversion and control, Kapha as ignorance and denial. Patanjali teaches that mental practices must target not just symptom relief but the root klisha patterns themselves. Ayurvedic frameworks thus expand beyond herbal and dietary intervention to include practices that dissolve these deeper mental constructs. The goal is the aklisha state—a mind free not merely from symptom but from the fundamental obstacles to clarity and wellbeing. This shifts treatment from symptom suppression toward genuine psychological liberation, where the nervous system resets and authentic mental health naturally emerges.
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