Patanjali's five primary afflictions are directly engaged and potentially combusted by psychedelic experiences, providing accelerated psychological catharsis.
Patanjali identifies five kleshas (afflictions) as roots of suffering: avidya (ignorance), asmita (ego-identification), raga (craving), dvesha (aversion), and abhinivesha (fear of death). These interweave to create psychological patterns of attachment, denial, and defensive rigidity. Psychedelics directly ignite tapasya—transformative heat that burns through klesha-patterns by exposing their illusory nature. Clients face asmita through ego-dissolution, raga and dvesha through equanimous exposure to normally avoided emotions, abhinivesha through mortality confrontation. Clinically, the challenge lies in allowing this burning without re-traumatization: providing adequate support, safety, and integration. The experience itself becomes what Patanjali calls tapasya—disciplined heat that purifies rather than merely disturbs. Post-session integration focuses on understanding what burned and why: recognizing patterns now exposed as optional rather than identity-constituting. Therapists trained in this framework expect psychedelic work to be intense; they prepare clients for difficulty not as failure but as necessary purification. The medicine doesn't eliminate kleshas but accelerates direct confrontation with them.
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