Patanjali's analysis of ego-identification as a fundamental mental distortion that keeps parts locked in protective roles and false identities.
Asmita, listed by Patanjali as one of the five klesas or afflictions (Yoga Sutras 2.3), is the confusion of the Self with the mind's content—the 'I-maker' that claims 'I am this thought, this emotion, this role.' In parts work, asmita is what keeps parts trapped in extreme identities: the rescuer is convinced they ARE the helper, the critic IS the protector, the exile IS worthless. These identifications feel true because asmita operates so fundamentally. By recognizing asmita as a mental mechanism rather than reality, practitioners begin to loosen these false self-concepts. A person doesn't become anxious; rather, an anxious part becomes active. A person isn't fundamentally flawed; rather, a critical part holds that belief. The Yoga Sutras teach that discriminating between the Self (purusha) and the mind's identifications is the path to liberation. In IFS language, this is the discovery that you are the Self, larger than any single part's narrative.
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