Recognizing how ego attachment undermines genuine boundaries, replacing them with defensive rigidity or punitive withholding.
Ahankara is ego-consciousness, the false self constructed from fear and pride. In bhakti tradition, liberation requires dissolving ahankara's grip. In boundary work, ahankara is the enemy of authenticity—it disguises needs as demands, transforms protection into punishment, and replaces honest communication with defensive walls. Mirabai rejected ahankara by refusing to defend herself through social propriety or perform respectability. Many boundary struggles actually involve ahankara fighting ahankara: one person's ego defending against another's, creating escalating rigidity. True boundaries, by contrast, arise from clarity about what we genuinely need, without needing the other person to validate us or admit wrongdoing. This concept teaches us to examine our boundaries: Do they emerge from authentic values or from wounded pride? Do they protect what matters or defend against shame? Boundaries rooted in ahankara exhaust us; those rooted in clarity sustain us.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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