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Glossary›Pancha Kleshas

Glossary

Pancha Kleshas

The five fundamental afflictions in yogic philosophy—ignorance, ego, attachment, aversion, and fear of death—that obscure awareness and perpetuate suffering.

What is Pancha Kleshas?

Pancha Kleshas (also spelled Pancha Klesas) are the five fundamental afflictions or obstacles described in classical yoga philosophy that cloud human consciousness and perpetuate cycles of suffering. Enumerated in Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras (circa 400 CE), these five kleshas are: avidya (ignorance or misapprehension of reality), asmita (ego-identification or sense of separate self), raga (attachment or craving), dvesha (aversion or hatred), and abhinivesha (fear of death or clinging to life). The Pancha Kleshas meaning extends beyond simple character flaws; they represent structural mechanisms through which the mind constructs and maintains a distorted perception of reality, binding consciousness to repetitive patterns of thought and behavior.

Origins & Lineage

The systematic enumeration of the Pancha Kleshas appears in Book II, verses 3-9 of Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras, the foundational text of Raja Yoga composed between 200 BCE and 400 CE. Patanjali describes avidya as the root affliction from which the other four arise sequentially: from ignorance of one’s true nature emerges ego-identification; from ego emerges attraction and repulsion; from these dual forces emerges the primal fear of annihilation. While Patanjali’s formulation is definitive, the concept of kleshas predates the Yoga Sutras, appearing in Buddhist Abhidharma literature and Samkhya philosophy, though with variations in enumeration and categorization. The Buddhist tradition identifies three root kleshas (greed, hatred, delusion) which subdivide into ten or more afflictive emotions, while Patanjali’s fivefold schema became canonical in Hindu yoga traditions. Commentators including Vyasa (5th century CE), whose Yoga Bhashya provides the earliest extant commentary on the Sutras, and later scholars such as Vachaspati Mishra (9th century) and Vijnanabhiksu (16th century) developed elaborate interpretations of how the kleshas operate and interrelate.

How It’s Practiced

Understanding the Pancha Kleshas is not an abstract philosophical exercise but a practical framework for self-observation and transformation. In traditional yoga practice, students learn to identify each klesha as it arises in daily life: recognizing avidya when assuming the body-mind complex to be the totality of self; noticing asmita in defensive reactions to criticism; observing raga in compulsive desire for pleasant experiences; witnessing dvesha in recoil from discomfort; and feeling abhinivesha in anxiety about mortality or loss. Meditation practices, particularly witness consciousness and self-inquiry methods, train practitioners to observe these afflictions without identification. The klesha model informs asana practice when students notice attachment to achieving particular poses or aversion to challenging ones. Contemplative practices may involve focused reflection on each klesha individually, examining how it manifests psychologically, emotionally, and somatically. Jnana yoga approaches use discrimination (viveka) to distinguish between the unchanging witness consciousness and the fluctuating mind affected by kleshas. Bhakti traditions address kleshas through surrender and devotion, dissolving ego-identification through relationship with the divine.

Pancha Kleshas Today

Contemporary seekers encounter the Pancha Kleshas teaching primarily through yoga teacher training programs, where Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras constitute essential curriculum, and through meditation retreats focused on classical yoga philosophy. Modern teachers such as B.K.S. Iyengar, Swami Satchidananda, and Edwin Bryant have made the klesha framework accessible to Western students through translations and commentaries. The concept appears frequently in workshops on yoga philosophy, often presented alongside related frameworks such as the eight limbs of yoga and the three gunas. Mindfulness-based therapeutic modalities have adapted klesha recognition into psychological language, helping clients identify cognitive distortions and emotional reactivity patterns. The teaching has particular resonance in discussions of spiritual materialism, where attachment and ego-identification manifest in the pursuit of enlightenment itself. Online courses, podcast discussions, and contemporary writings by teachers such as Richard Freeman and Sally Kempton explore the kleshas through both traditional commentaries and modern psychological lenses.

Common Misconceptions

The Pancha Kleshas are frequently misunderstood as moral failings requiring shame or self-judgment, when in fact they are described in the Yoga Sutras as natural, impersonal mechanisms of consciousness requiring investigation rather than condemnation. Another common error conflates kleshas with emotions themselves; the kleshas are not sadness, anger, or fear per se, but the underlying misapprehensions that generate afflictive emotional patterns. The teaching does not advocate suppression or elimination of human feeling but rather clear seeing of the ignorance beneath reactive patterns. Some interpretations present the kleshas as sequential stages that must be overcome one by one, but classical commentaries emphasize their interdependence and simultaneous operation at varying intensities. The framework is sometimes reduced to Buddhist teaching or presented as uniquely Hindu, obscuring its roots in the shared philosophical milieu of ancient India where concepts circulated across traditions. Finally, reducing abhinivesha solely to fear of physical death misses its broader meaning as clinging to continuity of the ego-construct and resistance to any dissolution of familiar self-structures.

How to Begin

Those new to the Pancha Kleshas teaching should begin with a reliable translation and commentary of the Yoga Sutras; Edwin Bryant’s Yoga Sutras of Patanjali provides scholarly precision with accessible language, while Georg Feuerstein’s The Yoga-Sutra of Patanjali offers philosophical context. Reading Book II, verses 3-9 slowly, with reflection on each klesha’s manifestation in personal experience, grounds conceptual understanding in direct observation. Establishing or deepening a meditation practice—particularly witness awareness or self-inquiry methods—provides the experiential foundation for recognizing kleshas as they arise. Working with a qualified yoga philosophy teacher or attending workshops specifically on the Yoga Sutras offers guided exploration and space for questions. Journaling exercises that track instances of each klesha throughout a day develop discrimination and self-awareness. For integration with movement practice, seek teachers trained in traditions that emphasize philosophical study alongside asana, such as Iyengar, Krishnamacharya lineages, or Integral Yoga. The goal is not intellectual mastery but progressive clarity: learning to recognize ignorance, identification, attraction, aversion, and fear as they color moment-to-moment experience.

Related terms

yoga sutras patanjalithree marks of existencedependent originationchoiceless awarenessspiritual materialismtirumalai krishnamacharya
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