Patanjali's concept of asmita (false ego-identity) explains how attachment trauma creates adopted personas that mask authentic relational needs and vulnerability.
Asmita, the ego-sense or false identity, is identified by Patanjali as a fundamental obscuration of clear perception. In attachment theory, asmita manifests as the defensive identities people construct around insecure patterns—the 'independent' avoidant who denies needing connection, or the 'accommodating' anxious person who abandons their own needs. These adopted identities protect against attachment pain but create distance from authentic relating. Patanjali's analysis suggests that secure attachment requires seeing through these false identities to recognize the vulnerable, authentic self beneath. Attachment trauma often creates asmita as a survival mechanism: children adopt personas to maintain whatever connection was available. Adult attachment work involves recognizing these protective identities without shame, understanding their original function, and gradually allowing the authentic self to emerge in relational spaces. This Yogic perspective deepens attachment theory by highlighting how insecure patterns aren't just behaviors but become intertwined with identity itself. Recovery involves both behavioral change and identity deconstruction—recognizing the false self was an adaptation, not your truth.
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