Asmita is the ego-bound sense of self that forms limiting beliefs about who we are, and Patanjali's teaching shows how recognizing this distortion enables belief transformation.
Patanjali identifies asmita—the false identification with the ego-mind—as a fundamental klesa (affliction) that generates and anchors limiting beliefs about identity. When we confuse our consciousness with the ego's self-image, we create rigid beliefs: "I am not creative," "I am unworthy," "I am defined by my failures." These beliefs feel like eternal truths because asmita has convinced us they represent our essential nature. The yogic path offers liberation by distinguishing between the unchanging witness consciousness and the ego's constructed narrative. This distinction is radical: once you recognize the false I-sense as a mental construct rather than reality, its accompanying beliefs lose their grip. Asmita doesn't disappear overnight, but sustained practice reveals its mechanical nature. As this recognition deepens, old beliefs naturally release their hold, making space for authentic self-understanding that flows from direct experience rather than conditioned identity.
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