The ego-identification with status and authority that perpetuates hierarchical abuse and prevents genuine power-sharing in political relationships.
Patanjali identifies asmita—false identification with the ego-self—as a fundamental obstacle to liberation. In political psychology, asmita manifests as leaders' unconscious fusion with their power, status, and authority, creating defensive rigidity and resistance to accountability. When a politician equates their personal identity with their political position, they experience threats to that position as existential threats, triggering irrational defensive behaviors: suppression of dissent, denial of error, and abuse of power. Understanding asmita in political contexts reveals why power corrupts—it reinforces ego identification and insulates leaders from reality-checking feedback. Organizational and political cultures that recognize asmita can design interventions: term limits, mandatory sabbaticals, peer councils, and practices that remind leaders of their shared humanity beyond role. This framework suggests that psychological maturity in politics requires conscious disidentification from power itself, allowing leaders to hold authority with flexibility, humility, and openness to succession.
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