What is ego?
Synthesized from Source
definition
"Ego is the illusion that you are the doer; in reality, life simply happens, and when you recognize this, the ego dissolves into the flow of existence."
According to Osho, ego is a misinterpretation of life’s flow: you believe “I am doing” what is, in truth, simply happening. Like the woodpecker claiming the lightning’s power, the mind translates happenings into doings and invents a doer. Recognize there is no doer or do-ee—only happenings—and the ego dissolves. Practice by inwardly replacing “I’m doing” with “It is happening” to return to humility and effortless presence.
Ego is when you take credit for what life is already doing by itself—like thinking you broke the tree when lightning did it.
Why this matters practically
- Reduces pride, guilt, and stress by dropping the burden of being the doer.
- Cultivates humility, gratitude, and ease in action.
- Improves relationships by softening defensiveness and the need to control.
- Cultivates humility, gratitude, and ease in action.
- Improves relationships by softening defensiveness and the need to control.
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