The ten fetters
Ten inner chains binding the mind to suffering — snapped one set at a time on the road to freedom.
The ten fetters (Pali dasa saṃyojanāni) are ten deep bonds that tie the mind to saṃsāra — the cycle of birth, death, and rebirth — and to the suffering woven through it. "Fetter" means a shackle: each one is a habit of mind that keeps a person bound. The early tradition uses them as a precise map of awakening, because the stages of liberation are defined by exactly which fetters have been severed.
The ten are: (1) belief in a fixed, separate self; (2) doubt about the path; (3) clinging to rules and rituals as ends in themselves; (4) sensual desire — craving for pleasant experiences; (5) ill will — aversion and hatred; (6) craving for refined "form" realms of existence; (7) craving for even subtler "formless" realms of existence; (8) conceit — the subtle background sense of "I am"; (9) restlessness; and (10) ignorance — the fundamental not-knowing of how things truly are. The first five are called the "lower" fetters and the last five the "higher," subtler ones.
These map onto four levels of awakened persons. A "stream-enterer" has cut the first three; a "once-returner" has also greatly weakened sensual desire and ill will (the fourth and fifth); a "non-returner" has cut all five lower fetters entirely; and an arhat — a fully liberated being — has severed all ten, including the deepest and most stubborn: conceit and ignorance. The scheme shows that liberation is not a single leap but a gradual, traceable loosening of the mind's chains.
Key passages(20)
The Transcendent Perfection of Wisdom in Ten Thousand Lines · The Tibetan Kangyur (84000)