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Understanding Human Suffering: The Five Kleśas and the Return to Our True Nature
Description
In this solo episode, Amy Wheeler explores one of the most important psychological teachings in the yoga tradition: the five kleśas, described in Chapter 2 of the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali. These teachings help explain why human beings experience suffering even when they are sincerely trying to live well.
Drawing from both Sāṅkhya philosophy and the Yoga Sūtra, Amy walks listeners through the deeper roots of suffering, beginning with the distinction between puruṣa (the witnessing consciousness) and prakṛti (the body, mind, senses, and the manifest world). When these two are confused, the mind becomes entangled in patterns of misperception, attachment, aversion, and fear. These patterns are what Pātañjali calls the kleśas.
Throughout the episode, Amy explains how these ancient teachings remain remarkably relevant today. The kleśas show up in modern life as over-identification with our roles, addiction to approval or stimulation, avoidance of discomfort, fear-driven decision making, and the constant pressure to control life so that we feel safe.
Rather than presenting yoga as a way to avoid suffering, Amy emphasizes that the deeper aim of yoga is to understand suffering clearly. Through practices such as movement, breath regulation, meditation, and ethical reflection, the practitioner gradually loosens the grip of these patterns and begins to remember their deeper nature.
The episode concludes with a reflection on one of Amy’s favorite teachings from the Yoga Sūtra: Yoga Sūtra 1.3, which describes the moment when awareness returns to its true nature and the seer rests in its essential state.
In This Episode
Amy explores:
• Why human beings suffer even when they are trying to live well
• The philosophical foundation of the Yoga Sūtra in Sāṅkhya philosophy
• The distinction between puruṣa (the witnessing consciousness) and prakṛti (the manifest world)
• How misperception leads to psychological suffering
• The five kleśas described in Yoga Sūtra 2.3
• How the kleśas appear in modern life and clinical practice
• Why yoga is fundamentally relational and practiced through human interaction
• How meditation helps return awareness to clarity and discernment
• The deeper meaning of Yoga Sūtra 1.3 and the experience of resting in one’s true nature
The Five Kleśas
The five kleśas are the underlying causes of suffering described by Pātañjali.
Avidyā — Misperception
The root kleśa. Avidyā occurs when we confuse the changing contents of experience with our deeper nature.
Asmitā — Misidentification
Over-identifying with personality, roles, reputation, or thoughts rather than recognizing the witnessing awareness behind them.
Rāga — Attachment
Clinging to experiences that feel pleasurable or validating, believing they will resolve deeper unease.
Dveṣa — Aversion
Avoiding experiences that feel painful or uncomfortable, which can lead to defensiveness, withdrawal, or emotional reactivity.
Abhiniveśa — Fear of Loss
The deep instinct to cling to life, identity, control, and stability. This fear can appear even in those who are wise and experienced.
Key Yoga Sūtras Referenced
Yoga Sūtra 2.3
Avidyā-asmitā-rāga-dveṣa-abhiniveśāḥ kleśāḥ
These five are the causes of suffering.
Yoga Sūtra 2.5
Avidyā is mistaking the impermanent for the permanent, the impure for the pure, pain for pleasure, and the non-self for the self.
Yoga Sūtra 1.3
Tadā draṣṭuḥ svarūpe ’vasthānam
Then th