Listening to Your Ego, or Your True Self?
For most people, ego becomes an issue only when someone has too much of it and is considered egotistical - and even then, a big ego is often equated with drive and success. The situation is very different seen from the perspective of consciousness. The reason that Buddhists speak of "ego death" is that a different self is disguised by the demands of "I, me, and mine."
In many spiritual traditions the ego is seen as the false self. There are many reasons for this, such as the following:
"I" defines you as an isolated mind encased in a packet of skin and bones. Your existence begins at birth and ends at death.
Being separate, "I' is at odds with other egos, each competing for a limited share of food, shelter, power, money, and status.
Because it is so small and limited, "I" is set against the overwhelming forces of Nature. Dwarfed into insignificance by a vast, cold universe, the ego sees its primary task as survival.
In a lifetime, "I" stakes its claim on a person's likes and dislikes, along with a fund of memories, all aimed at trying to maximize pleasure and minimizing pain. Despite this endeavor, which continues day after day, the ego is haunted by anxiety.
No matter how much "I" acquires in terms of externals, there is an inner sense of insecurity. The ultimate insecurity centers on aging, disease, and death.
Viewed from this very negative perspective, "I" becomes an adversary to happiness, even though almost everyone tries to become happy by giving the ego everything it wants and trying to ignore its underlying fears and doubts. That would be a reasonable, if pessimistic, strategy if there were no alternative. The world's wisdom traditions exist to offer an alternative, however, and when someone discovers it, life enters an entirely new phase, known spiritually in India as the second birth.
The true self isn't centered on the demands of ego but on higher values: love, truth, creativity, compassion. Because it is connected to the source of awareness, at a deeper level of the mind, the true self is at peace. It is buffeted by the ups and downs of life. Separation is at an end; therefore, no need exists for unspoken anxiety and insecurity. There is no hole to fill with the endless pursuit of pleasure and distraction. Life is devoted to expanding one's consciousness and growing from the inside.
Courtesy of YouTube/Chopra Well
This message sounds strange to modern ears, I know, but the true self isn't a relic of ages long past. It addresses universal issues. Which is the same as saying that the path to higher consciousness is always open, because the choice between ego and the true self is perennial - every generation confronts it anew. If there are two paths in life, a choice is implied. In the next post we'll discuss how thinking, speaking, and doing - the three activities we all engage in every day - are transformed by choices made in awareness. The promise of the true self depends upon these choices.
(To be cont.)
Deepak Chopra, MD, FACP, is the author of more than 70 books with twenty-one New York Times Bestsellers in both fiction and non-fiction. Chopra is the Founder of The Chopra Foundation, co-author with Sanjiv Chopra, Brotherhood: Dharma, Destiny and the American Dream
Exploring possibilities in Higher Education and willing to perform at the highest.
9 年As I see it this lecture reassures the belief that spirituality or none will always be a choice and it will forever be. The search for the true self will stand no matter time or change. Therefore Hope.
LIGHTHEART transforms spaces with expert lighting solutions enhancing ambiance functionality & compliance. From amenity to exterior lighting we support SKA &E02/E04 standards blending style efficiency & sustainability
9 年"We" live and learn
CEO/Director at Lyalpur Institute of Medical Sciences (LIMS) CCO Rabia Trust Hospital
10 年I has the same problem of right and wrong but with different border what you called real i and i .so crisis is always surrounding oneself in interior or exterior side.but if I starts following my I whatever it demands me to do .it will worsen my present may be
Quantitative Analyst | Financial Analyst | Data Analyst | Bridging Technical Expertise with Creative Insights for Long-term, Impactful Decisions | Finance Professor | Economic Researcher | Programmer
10 年The real danger is in denying the existence of anxiety, sadness, and the ultimate loneliness that all human beings are born into. No system of belief can bring about a calm life. Even drugs, alcohol, and other form of addictions only remove the suffering for a brief period of time. Instead of advocating/promising a wonderland (of calm, peace, tranquility and such), we can do better by finding ways of making the suffering more meaningful, playful, and ultimately enjoyable.
Lokah: samasthah: sukhino bhavantu
11 年Deepak Chopra has tried to explain in a simple and beautiful way what this Ego, or false ego is. It is called by different names, like the false self, the lower self, the mind, the Ignorant self, and so on. In Sanskrit the Ego is the cause for a term called MAYA, which is -- what you see is not the real, and the real is not seen. Tulsi Ramayan sums it up in a beautiful way " I, me, mine is the cause for this maya.