Self-inquiry sounds soft. In practice it’s the hardest thing in yoga.
The question “who am I” is older than every framework you’ve heard for answering it. Patanjali, the Upanishads, Ramana Maharshi β the question doesn’t get answered, it gets refined. You ask it, you watch what comes up, you ask it again with whatever’s left.
Most of what comes up first is identity in the social sense. Job title, role in the family, list of preferences, list of accomplishments. Those are useful for life admin and bad for self-inquiry. They’re labels other people gave you that you started using yourself.
What’s underneath? Patience. The habit of sitting with the question without rushing to fill it. Most people can’t tolerate that sitting for more than thirty seconds before reaching for a story.
Yoga makes it slightly easier because the breath gives you something to hold onto. The body gives you signals. You start noticing the layer of you that does the noticing β and then you ask, “wait, what is that?”
That’s where it gets interesting. That’s where the practice starts.
The self-inquiry tradition doesn’t promise a tidy answer. It promises that asking the question seriously, over years, changes the asker. The question erodes the things you were sure of. What’s left is what was actually there underneath the labels. That’s the work the practice is pointing at.
From Video: Who Am I? The Journey to Discover Your True Self on michaeljoelhall.com
