Ahamkara, the false ego-sense, shows how internal parts can become identified as the true self, preventing integration and authentic witness consciousness.
Ahamkara literally means 'I-maker'—the mechanism by which the mind identifies with temporary thoughts, roles, and protective strategies as if they were the essential self. In Patanjali's system, ahamkara creates the illusion that what we think and feel is fundamentally who we are. This concept directly parallels IFS's understanding of parts taking over the psyche: when a manager part runs the show, we identify as 'the responsible one'; when an exile floods consciousness, we become 'the victim.' Ahamkara explains why parts feel so absolute and convincing—they claim authority of the self. By recognizing ahamkara as a mechanism rather than truth, practitioners develop the capacity to witness parts without fusion. The Yogic path teaches that beneath ahamkara lies the witness consciousness (Purusha), which can observe all parts with equanimity. This distinction is liberating: you are not your protective strategies; you are the awareness that knows them.
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