Patanjali's concept of asmita (false ego-identity) reveals how trauma survivors unconsciously fuse identity with victimhood, blocking access to their fuller self.
Asmita—egoic identification or false sense of self—is Patanjali's second kleshic affliction. In trauma, survivors often unconsciously construct identity from their wounds: "I am a survivor," "I am broken," "I am unlovable." While trauma acknowledgment is necessary, asmita describes the subtle trap of fusing entire identity with trauma history. Patanjali teaches that the true Self (Purusha) exists beyond all constructs, including victim narratives. For PTSD sufferers, this distinction is liberating: healing doesn't erase history but decouples identity from it. You experienced trauma, but you are not your trauma. Asmita clarifies that victim identity, while sometimes protective, eventually constricts healing potential. Patanjali's teachings encourage seeing beyond the wounded self to the consciousness witnessing the wounds. Modern trauma therapy validates this: survivors heal not by denying trauma but by expanding identity beyond it, reclaiming agency, purpose, and capacity. By recognizing asmita's operation—the subtle ego-identification with victimhood—survivors can gently release this contracted identity and step into a larger sense of self that includes but isn't limited to their history.
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