Identifying five psychological afflictions that impede linguistic progress, offering specific practices to overcome each barrier.
Patanjali identifies five kleshas—afflictions or obstacles—that directly manifest as language learning barriers: avidya (ignorance of one's capacity), asmita (ego-driven perfectionism), raga (attachment to comfort), dvesha (aversion to difficulty), and abhinivesha (fear of incompetence). A learner experiencing asmita refuses to speak imperfectly, blocking fluency development; raga keeps them in familiar beginner materials rather than challenging their abilities; dvesha triggers avoidance of grammar study; abhinivesha creates test anxiety. By recognizing these patterns as archetypal afflictions rather than personal failures, learners develop psychological flexibility to work through them. Patanjali's systematic approach treats language barriers not as vocabulary gaps but as psychological conditions requiring contemplative intervention. This reframes language plateaus from frustrating failures into opportunities for psychological development, creating motivation for the inner work that paradoxically accelerates linguistic progress.
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