Patanjali's concept of ahamkara (ego-sense) as the mechanism of self-identification, essential for understanding how parts develop separate identities and claim ownership over the system's narrative.
Ahamkara, the sense of 'I' or ego, is Patanjali's term for the identification mechanism that creates the illusion of separation. In parts work, ahamkara describes how protective parts develop distinct identities: "I am the warrior," "I am the caretaker," "I am the shame-bearer." Each part operates through ahamkara, claiming particular thoughts, emotions, and roles as fundamentally "who I am." This identification becomes the barrier to Internal Family Systems healing—parts believe their protective strategies are essential to survival. Patanjali's insight is revolutionary: ahamkara is not evil; it's a necessary function that has become habitual. The therapeutic work involves witnessing ahamkara's operation across different parts without collapsing into any single identity. By understanding how ego-sense fragments across the internal system, we create psychological freedom. IFS calls this achieving Self-leadership—the recognition that no part's identity defines the whole. Patanjali's philosophy suggests that liberation emerges when we observe ahamkara without being captured by it, allowing parts to relax their rigid self-concepts.
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