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Glossary›Dvesha

Glossary

Dvesha

Sanskrit term for aversion, hatred, or anger; one of the three root kleshas (mental afflictions) in Buddhist and Hindu philosophy that perpetuates suffering.

What is Dvesha?

Dvesha (Sanskrit: द्वेष, IAST: dveṣa; Pali: दोस, dosa; Tibetan: zhe sdang) is a Buddhist and Hindu term that is translated as “hate, aversion”. More precisely, dvesha is the wish to avoid something, to separate from it, to reject it. The term encompasses a spectrum of reactive states—from subtle resistance and irritation to overt hostility, anger, and repulsion. Unlike transient emotional responses, dvesha is understood as a fundamental mental affliction (klesha) that distorts perception, drives unwholesome action, and binds beings to cyclic existence.

Dvesha is identified as one of the three poisons (Trivisah) within the Mahayana Buddhist tradition, alongside ignorance (avidya/moha) and attachment (raga). It is also recognized as one of the three unwholesome roots within the Theravada Buddhist tradition and one of the fourteen unwholesome mental factors within the Theravada Abhidharma teachings. In Hinduism, dvesha is one of the five obstacles called kleshas within the Yoga Sutras, classified alongside avidya (ignorance), asmita (egoism), raga (attachment), and abhinivesha (fear of death).

Dvesha is symbolically present as the snake in the center of Tibetan bhavachakra drawings. In the Wheel of Life, the snake biting the tail of the pig (ignorance) and rooster (attachment) illustrates how these three poisons perpetually generate karma and rebirth.

Origins & Lineage

The concept of dvesha appears in the earliest strata of Indian contemplative literature. In Buddhist tradition, the teaching on the three poisons is attributed to the historical Buddha, Siddhartha Gautama (circa 563–483 BCE), who identified aversion (dosa in Pali) as one of the root causes of dukkha (suffering). According to Buddhist teachings, the three poisons (of ignorance, attachment, and aversion) are the primary causes that keep sentient beings trapped in samsara. The Pali Canon’s Abhidhamma Pitaka elaborates dvesha/dosa as one of the unwholesome roots that condition all destructive mental states.

In the Mahayana tradition, texts such as the Abhidharma-samuccaya systematically categorize dvesha among the six root kleshas. Nagarjuna (circa 150–250 CE), the founder of the Madhyamaka school, analyzed the three poisons as conceptual fabrications rooted in ignorance of emptiness (shunyata). Later Tibetan masters including Tsongkhapa (1357–1419) and contemporary teachers such as Geshe Tashi Tsering have examined dvesha as a distortion arising from the mistaken belief in an inherently existing self.

In the Hindu Yoga tradition, Yoga Sutras II.8 describes dvesha (aversion) as originating from encounters with pain. Patanjali (circa 2nd century BCE to 4th century CE) identifies dvesha as one of the five kleshas that obscure discriminative wisdom and prevent liberation (kaivalya). Classical commentators like Vyasa further explicate how aversion stems from the misidentification of the true Self (purusha) with the fluctuations of the mind (chitta vritti).

How It’s Practiced

Dvesha is not a practice but a mental affliction to be recognized and uprooted. However, contemplative traditions offer specific methods to work with aversion:

Recognition and mindfulness: Practitioners learn to identify dvesha in real time—noticing the felt sense of contraction, resistance, or pushing away that arises in response to unpleasant experience. Vipassana meditation (insight meditation) trains students to observe aversion with bare attention, neither suppressing nor indulging the reactive impulse.

Antidote practices: By cultivating awareness and practicing loving-kindness to counteract dvesha, practitioners move closer to realizing the truths of impermanence and non-self, ultimately leading to liberation from suffering. Metta (loving-kindness) meditation systematically extends goodwill toward oneself, loved ones, neutral persons, difficult persons, and all beings—directly countering the contracted energy of aversion. Tonglen (Tibetan: giving and receiving) practice involves breathing in suffering and breathing out compassion, transforming aversion into empathy.

Analytical meditation: In the Tibetan Buddhist lam-rim (stages of the path) tradition, practitioners investigate the object of aversion, examining whether it possesses the inherent negative qualities the mind projects onto it. This deconstructs the exaggerated perception that fuels dvesha.

Ethical restraint: The Buddhist precepts (sila) and yogic yamas provide behavioral guidelines that prevent actions motivated by aversion—refraining from harsh speech, violence, and cruelty.

Dvesha Today

Contemporary seekers encounter teachings on dvesha through multiple channels. Vipassana retreats in the tradition of S.N. Goenka and Mahasi Sayadaw explicitly train students to observe aversion as it arises during sitting meditation. Insight Meditation Society (IMS) in Massachusetts and Spirit Rock in California offer courses that include investigation of the three poisons.

Tibetan Buddhist centers worldwide teach lojong (mind training) practices that work directly with aversion. The 14th Dalai Lama and teachers such as Pema Chödrön have popularized practices like tonglen for Western audiences, framing them as antidotes to hatred and fear. Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) and Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT), while secularized, retain the core insight practice of observing aversive reactions without identification.

In the yoga world, studios teaching Patanjali’s eight-limbed path include the study of the kleshas, often through sutra study groups and philosophy workshops. Modern teachers like Richard Freeman and Nicolai Bachman integrate klesha teachings into asana and pranayama instruction, inviting students to notice aversion arising in challenging poses.

Online platforms such as Dharma Seed archive thousands of talks on working with aversion. Teachers including Joseph Goldstein, Ajahn Brahm, and Tara Brach offer guided practices and psychological frameworks for understanding dvesha in daily life.

Common Misconceptions

Dvesha is often misunderstood as simply “anger” or “hatred,” but the term is broader and more subtle. It includes mild irritation, impatience, boredom, and even the subtle turning away from uncomfortable sensations during meditation. Dvesha is not limited to emotions directed at people; it includes aversion to physical pain, mental states, circumstances, and even aspects of oneself.

Another misconception is that the goal is to eliminate all negative emotions. Buddhist and yogic traditions do not advocate for emotional suppression. Instead, they teach discernment: recognizing the difference between natural pain (an unavoidable aspect of embodied existence) and the additional suffering created by aversive reactivity. Dvesha is the latter—the mental proliferation and contraction that intensifies and prolongs suffering.

Some students conflate working with dvesha with becoming passive or tolerating harm. Contemplative traditions distinguish between aversion (a contracted, reactive mental state rooted in self-clinging) and wise discernment that protects boundaries and responds skillfully to injustice. One can act decisively without hatred.

Finally, dvesha is not an inherent, unchangeable trait. The source of both raga (attachment) and dvesha (aversion) is avidya (ignorance). Because aversion is conditioned and arises dependent on causes, it can be deconstructed through insight and practice.

How to Begin

For those new to working with dvesha, begin with a simple daily practice of noticing aversion. During ordinary activities—eating, commuting, conversing—pause when you feel resistance, annoyance, or the impulse to push something away. Name it silently: “aversion.” This recognition alone begins to weaken identification with the reaction.

Read foundational texts that contextualize dvesha within the larger framework of liberation. The Abhidhamma in Practice by N.K.G. Mendis offers a clear Theravada perspective on unwholesome roots. For the Mahayana view, consult The Jewel Ornament of Liberation by Gampopa or The Joy of Living by Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche. In the yoga tradition, The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali translated by Edwin Bryant provides scholarly commentary on the kleshas.

Establish a daily meditation practice that includes body scanning and breath awareness. Notice where aversion manifests somatically—tightness in the chest, clenched jaw, shallow breathing. When unpleasant sensations arise, practice staying present rather than reflexively adjusting your posture.

Find a teacher or sangha (community). Working with aversion is subtle and benefits from guidance. Look for Insight Meditation or Vipassana groups, Tibetan Buddhist centers offering lojong instruction, or yoga studios that teach the philosophy of the Yoga Sutras alongside asana practice. Many centers now offer online courses and drop-in sessions for beginners exploring the meaning of dvesha and how to practice with it.

Related terms

three marks of existencefour noble truthsloving kindness meditationbreath awareness meditationmindfulness based stress reductiontibetan buddhism
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