Hygro
soundcloud.com/hygro/
Personal or social, claims or deeds, what are the rules of what is a person's identity?
Whence does your identity come?
mostly just a collection of stories - we are who we say we are
A lot of this stuff isn't that creative though. We steal concepts constantly. We learn who we are because we're told who we are.At some point the focusing awareness recognizes the concept *I* and says something to itself about that. Then it spends a lifetime "discovering" evidence that it was right the first time, most of which it creates. Recognition of "hey, I chose that, and I can choose something else" provides access to an entirely different existence.
A lot of this stuff isn't that creative though. We steal concepts constantly. We learn who we are because we're told who we are.
A lot of this stuff isn't that creative though. We steal concepts constantly. We learn who we are because we're told who we are.
Who are we if we get past all the criticism?A lot of this stuff isn't that creative though. We steal concepts constantly. We learn who we are because we're told who we are.
Who are we if we get past all the criticism?
The part about the human mind that demands to be right.What is it that automatically replaces "told who we are" with "criticism"?
The part about the human mind that demands to be right.
I'm skeptical about defining the goals and purpose of the human mind. I would agree that our egos like to be right and call things certain, even when they are not. But are our egos us? Are they our fundamental identity? The whole question of individual identity would seem to be a "trick" of our egotistical side to separate us from acknowledging our deep roots in the larger scheme of nature and our need to bond with others.Only if you agree with it. Someone saying "you're xxxxx" doesn't make it so. Only "I'm xxxxx" makes it so, because the human mind demands to be right.
The proving that is never quite done is the burden of life. Even if you look at those possibilities and see something that makes you think "I wish I'd chosen that" there is nothing that makes for a lesser burden than anything else. The only freedom comes from recognizing "I just said that." It isn't some "fate" or "assignment," or "the way that I am," it is just something I said at the time. Since it is just something you said you clearly can say something else if you choose. Something more grounded in your adult view of the world, maybe.
But the important thing is that when you choose this new thing don't immediately forget that it too is just something you said. While you can choose wisely and use it to shape your life from that point forward it can still create the same burden if you let your mind's demand to be right turn you back into the same over driven proving machine, just with a new focus.