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Ahamkara: The I-Making Mind That Creates False Identity

The Sanskrit term for ego-mind that fabricates identity, revealing how much of what you grieve was never real in the first place.

Mira
Why It Matters

Ahamkara literally means the 'I-maker'—the mind's capacity to construct and defend a sense of separate self. In bhakti and yogic philosophy, ahamkara is the fundamental mechanism that creates the false identity you're grieving. The paradox is: the identity you lost never existed in the way you believed it did. Your former self was a mental construction, useful perhaps, but not as solid or permanent as you imagined. Mirabai taught that spiritual freedom comes from recognizing ahamkara's nature—seeing how the mind constantly creates an 'I' that claims permanence, status, and ownership. When your identity dissolves, ahamkara desperately tries to hold it together through grief, blame, and resistance. This concept invites you to examine: What exactly are you mourning? The loss of a real person, or the collapse of a mental story? This isn't dismissive; it's liberating. By understanding ahamkara, you can grieve authentically while simultaneously recognizing that the deepest part of you—your awareness itself—was never constructed and thus cannot be lost. Your identity changed, but you didn't.

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