The recognition that the ego's need for self-image, control, and superiority systematically distorts our moral perception and judgment.
Patanjali identifies ahamkara—the ego sense of separate self—as a fundamental obstacle to clear perception. In moral psychology, the ego creates systematic distortions: we rationalize self-serving decisions as noble, judge others harshly for actions we forgive in ourselves, and prioritize our image over authentic ethics. The ego asks 'What makes me look good?' rather than 'What is actually right?' This psychological pattern explains moral hypocrisy, self-deception, and the gap between our espoused values and actual choices. Patanjali's solution isn't ego annihilation but ego transcendence: developing sufficient self-awareness and mental clarity to observe the ego's operations without being enslaved by them. Through meditation and witness consciousness, we create distance from the ego's demands. We notice when pride drives our decisions, when fear of shame influences our choices, when the need for control corrupts our judgment. This space between observer and ego-impulse is where genuine moral freedom emerges—the capacity to choose ethics independent of ego consequences.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.