Patanjali's concept of ahamkara (ego-identification) illuminates how fusion with protective parts creates false identity, and how dis-identification restores access to the Self's authentic leadership.
Ahamkara—the sense of 'I-ness' or ego-identification—represents a fundamental limitation in Patanjali's philosophy: the tendency to mistake the fluctuating mind for the eternal Self. In IFS language, this is fusion: the state where you are so identified with a part's perspective that you cannot distinguish its voice from your own. A manager part's constant planning becomes 'who you are'; an exile's shame becomes your fundamental identity; a firefighter's addiction feels like your authentic desire. Patanjali teaches that liberation requires viveka (discrimination) between the eternal witness and temporary mental fluctuations. IFS's core technique of unfusion works identically: by separating from ahamkara's grip, you recover the Self's capacity to observe, understand, and work skillfully with each part. As you dis-identify from any single part's narrative, you access the larger consciousness that can hold compassion for all parts simultaneously—your truest Self.
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