Patanjali's asmita (ego-sense) recognized as a protective part with necessary functions, to be understood rather than transcended or eliminated.
Asmita—the ego-sense or I-am-ness—is identified by Patanjali as a subtle vritti, a fluctuation that can obscure pure awareness. Traditionally in yoga, asmita is seen as an obstacle to transcendence. However, in Parts work and IFS psychology, asmita is reframed: it is a necessary protective part whose role is to defend identity, maintain boundaries, and ensure survival. Your asmita-part constructed your personality, beliefs, and defenses in response to early environments and threats. Rather than transcending this part, mature practice involves understanding its architecture and renegotiating its role. The asmita-part can relax its need to control identity and prove your worth when it trusts the Self's capacity to navigate. Patanjali's insight that asmita is not the true Self remains valid—your authentic awareness transcends ego-constructs—but the IFS perspective adds compassion: the ego-part is not an enemy but a loyal guardian that mistook its burden for your salvation. By dialoguing with asmita, you recover the genuine confidence and self-knowing it was trying to manufacture through control, revealing that true identity needs no defensive scaffolding.
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