Ahamkara, the ego-sense, can distort suffering into personal failure; dissolving false ego-narratives reveals genuine existential meaning.
Ahamkara, the sense of separate self or ego in Yoga Sutras, creates identification with transient circumstances and personal narratives that obscure deeper meaning. When we suffer, ahamkara generates stories: I am my illness, I am my failure, I am broken. These identifications contract our sense of purpose to one dimension of experience. Logotherapy's existential perspective teaches that our essential being transcends circumstantial suffering—we are consciousness capable of meaning-making, not merely our conditions. Patanjali shows that ahamkara is itself a mental construct that can be examined and loosened. This practice liberates us from ego-invested narratives about suffering that prevent authentic meaning discovery. When we distinguish between the ego's limited story and our larger existential capacity, suffering loses its power to define us entirely. We can then ask: Who am I beneath this circumstance? What meaning calls to me beyond ego protection? This dissolution of false identity is prerequisite for Frankl's deeper therapeutic work.
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