Patanjali's identification of ego-identity confusion as a root cause of suffering, directly reflecting how we fuse with protective parts and lose access to Self.
Asmita—the sense of 'I am this'—is one of Patanjali's five kleshas (afflictions). It represents the mistaken identification with limited aspects of ourselves, the confusion of Self with ego-constructs. In IFS language, this is fusion: when we identify as 'the anxious one' or 'the angry one,' we have fused with a protector part and lost access to the larger Self that can hold and heal that part. Patanjali teaches that asmita keeps us trapped in narrow identity, perpetually defending a false self-image. Many people enter Parts work believing they are their most dominant parts—the perfectionist, the people-pleaser, the critic. But these are adaptations, protective strategies developed in response to early wounding. True freedom comes from disidentifying with these roles and reconnecting with the witnessing awareness beneath them. Through yoga and meditation, Patanjali's students learn to notice 'I am observing anxiety' rather than 'I am anxious.' This shift from fusion to witnessing is precisely the move from asmita to Self-awareness, the central movement of IFS healing.
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