One of yogaâs strengths is that it gives us language for things weâve always felt but couldnât quite name. The kleshas are a perfect exampleâfive core mental emotional human patterns said to cloud perception and drive suffering into cycles and behaviour habits.
You donât need to remember the Sanskrit, but the insight? Thatâs worth hanging onto.
The kleshas arenât about diagnosing people or fixing flaws. Theyâre simply a framework for noticing, observing the thoughts and actions that pull us off centre, again and again. Yoga doesnât shame us for these patterns or ask us to change at all, it simply invites us to observe them with curiosity, not criticism.
Letâs take a closer look:
   â˘Â   AvidyÄ â misunderstanding reality
The stories we tell ourselves: âIâm not good enoughâ or âThis will never change.â
   â˘Â   AsmitÄ â false identification
When we mistake what weâre feeling or doing for who we are: âIâm anxious, therefore Iâm weak.â
   â˘Â   RÄgaḼ â attachment
Clinging to what feels good, even when itâs no longer serving us: âI just want things to go back to how they were.â
   â˘Â   DveᚣaḼ â aversion
Avoiding discomfort at all costs: âIf I ignore it, maybe itâll go away.â
   â˘Â   AbhiniveĹaḼ â fear of change or loss
The deep instinct to stick to what we knowâeven when weâre ready for change.
You donât need to be on a yoga mat to feel these patterns show up. They surface in conversations, relationships, late-night scrolling, decision-making and every time we reach for the familiar over the unfamiliar. And thatâs normal. These are deeply human experiences. The point in yoga isnât to eliminate themâitâs to learn to spot them when they arise, to gently acknowledge and anticipate rather than react and feel at a loss as to why.
What yoga offers us is a pause. A moment to ask: âIs this thought true?â or âIs this reaction helpful?â Over time, we begin to separate the pattern from the person. We soften. We become less tangled.
If youâve ever noticed yourself thinking the same thoughts, reacting the same way, or spiralling through the same cycle and then wondering whyâyouâre not broken. Youâre just human. The kleshas remind us that suffering can have a recognisable shape and more importantly, that awareness is the first step in shifting it.
Yoga doesnât give us all the answers but it does offer us a better set of questions.