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Glossary›Asmita

Glossary

Asmita

Asmita is the Sanskrit term for ego-identification—the mistaken belief that consciousness is identical with the mind, body, or personal identity.

What is Asmita?

Asmita is the identification of puruṣa (pure consciousness) with buddhi (the power of cognition)—a foundational concept in yoga philosophy describing the root confusion between the unchanging observer (the Self) and the changing instrument of perception (the mind-body complex). Sometimes translated as “ego,” asmita is the second of five afflictions of the mind, or klesas, outlined in the second chapter of the Yoga Sutra. Asmita happens when you identify with the parts of yourself that change—everything from your mind to your body, appearance, or job title—instead of with the quiet place within you that does not change.

Asmita is not simply arrogance or pride; it is the fundamental misapprehension of identity itself. When we say “I am angry,” “I am a teacher,” or “I am successful,” asmita is the mechanism that fuses a temporary state or role with the sense of being. This conflation creates suffering because we inevitably cling to conditions that are impermanent.

Origins & Lineage

The Yoga Sutras draw from three distinct traditions from the 2nd century BCE to the 1st century CE, namely Samkhya, Buddhism traditions, and “various older ascetic and religious strands of speculation”. Historical data indicates that it must have been before 200 BC that Patanjali compiled the text. The third śloka of the second chapter of Patañjali’s Yoga Sūtras explicitly identifies the five poisons (pañcakleśa): Avidyāsmitārāgadveṣābhiniveśāḥ pañca kleśāḥ—Ignorance, Egoism, Attachment, Aversion, and Fear of Death.

Patanjali’s formulation built on Samkhya philosophy’s distinction between purusha (pure consciousness) and prakriti (nature, the manifest world). Patanjali holds that avidya, ignorance is the cause of all five kleshas, which are the cause of suffering and saṁsāra. Asmita is understood as arising directly from avidya—we first forget our true nature, then mistake the limited self for the whole.

Interestingly, asmita appears in two contexts in the Yoga Sutras. In Sutra 1.17, Asmita means “I-ness” or sense of self and is described as the subtlest stage of samprajnata samadhi (meditative absorption with an object). Here it is not afflictive but a refined state of concentration. In Sutra 2.6, asmita is the second klesha—an obstacle to liberation. This dual usage has sparked centuries of commentary about the difference between refined self-awareness and egoic self-contraction.

How Asmita Is Practiced (and Overcome)

Asmita is not a practice but a pattern to be observed, understood, and transcended. The question “what is asmita” leads directly to “how do I work with it?”

Self-inquiry (Atma Vichara) is the primary method. Regularly ask, “Who am I beyond these labels?” to deepen awareness of the true self. This questioning disrupts automatic identification with thoughts, emotions, and roles. Ramana Maharshi’s method of tracing the “I”-thought to its source is a direct application of working with asmita.

Meditation reveals asmita in real time. When someone sits quietly, the mind begins to reveal its habits. Thoughts arise that replay old roles. Thoughts arise that focus on who we believe we should be. Thoughts arise that compare us to others. Witnessing these patterns without grasping creates the space necessary for asmita to dissolve.

Asana practice becomes a laboratory for observing ego. Notice when the ego comes into play—for example, when you feel the need to compete with others or seek validation through achieving advanced poses. The mat reveals when you tie self-worth to performance, flexibility, or mastery.

Study of the kleshas (klesha sadhana) is foundational. Understanding that asmita is one link in a chain—born from avidya and giving rise to raga (attachment) and dvesha (aversion)—contextualizes the work. The Yoga Sutras describe four stages of klesha intensity: dormant, attenuated, interrupted, and fully active. Practice moves the kleshas from active to dormant states.

Asmita Today

Contemporary seekers encounter asmita in yoga classes, meditation retreats, self-inquiry intensives, and Advaita Vedanta satsangs. Teachers like Eckhart Tolle, Adyashanti, and Mooji address asmita (though they rarely use the term) when they point to the difference between the “false self” and presence. Asmita plays a major role in modern life, where identity is often shaped by social status, achievements, and comparison. The rise of social media intensifies asmita, reinforcing the illusion that self-worth depends on external validation.

In traditional settings, asmita is studied in Yoga Sutra courses, particularly those following the Krishnamacharya lineage (Desikachar, Iyengar, Jois). T.K.V. Desikachar told students, “Yoga is relationship,” emphasizing that the most important relationship you will ever have is your relationship with the Self.

Therapeutic modalities increasingly recognize asmita. Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), and Internal Family Systems (IFS) all work with the mechanisms of identification that yoga calls asmita.

Common Misconceptions

Asmita is not the same as healthy self-esteem. A common Western confusion treats all ego as pathological. Developmental psychology recognizes that a coherent sense of self is necessary for functioning. Asmita, in yogic terms, is specifically the misidentification of consciousness with the contents of consciousness.

“Destroying the ego” is not the goal. Asmi means ‘I am’ which is pure awareness self-existence. But when it comes in contact with māyā it changes to ‘I am this’ where ‘this’ represents physical body. So, yoga practice destroys asmitā and reduces veil of avidyā. The “I am” remains; the false additions fall away.

Asmita is not only arrogance. Some people imagine ego as pride or superiority. That idea is only one small piece of what ego can look like. Ego also shows up as worry, doubt, and the pressure to prove something. Self-doubt and self-aggrandizement are both asmita—both are fixations on a limited sense of self.

It is not “spiritual bypassing” to work with asmita. Acknowledging the difference between Self and ego-personality does not mean avoiding psychological work, setting boundaries, or tending to trauma. Yogic practice and therapy are complementary.

How to Begin

Start with the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali. Read Sutra 2.3–2.9 (the klesha section) in multiple translations: Chip Hartranft, Edwin Bryant, or Georg Feuerstein offer scholarly rigor; Nischala Joy Devi and Nicolai Bachman offer accessibility.

Observe the “I”-thought. For one week, notice every time you say or think “I am [X].” Write them down. Notice which identifications feel most solid, most defended. These are asmita’s favorite hiding places.

Sit for five minutes daily and ask: “Who is aware of this thought?” When a thought arises—“I’m bored,” “I’m anxious”—pause and locate the awareness that knows the thought. This simple pivot begins to loosen identification.

Find a teacher. Asmita is subtle and self-referential; the ego co-opts spiritual practice easily. A qualified teacher in the Advaita, Dzogchen, Zen, or classical yoga tradition can offer reflection and guidance. Satsang with teachers like Mooji, Adyashanti, or in the lineage of Ramana Maharshi or Nisargadatta Maharaj addresses asmita directly.

Study Samkhya philosophy. Understanding the purusha-prakriti framework clarifies what asmita obscures. Georg Feuerstein’s The Yoga Tradition and Swami Satchidananda’s The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali provide accessible entry points.

Related terms

yoga sutraskleshaavidyapurushabuddhiadvaitaself inquirysamadhi
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