by Gary 'Z' McGee
December
28, 2017
from
TheMindUnleashed Website
Gary Z McGee,
a former Navy Intelligence
Specialist turned philosopher, is the author of
Birthday Suit of God and The
Looking Glass Man.
His works are inspired by
the great philosophers of the ages and his wide awake
view of the modern world.
He is also the philosophy
writer for The Mind Unleashed. |
Image:
Ego/CE.
"We are
all born free
and spend a
lifetime
becoming slaves
to
our own false
truths."
Atticus
Understand:
Your ego is
not your enemy...
It's more like a
clumsy anchor with too many feelings attached to it.
It's like a whiny,
woe-is-me mass of sentimentality constantly tripping over itself
in front of you.
If you are the horse,
then Ego is the cart that you keep ramming into wondering why you
can't get anywhere.
Still, it's not the enemy.
It's one of the most
vital aspects of yourself.
The problem is that
you are probably its bitch, instead of the other way around.
You are your ego's
tool, and it leverages you against yourself all the damn time.
It slaps you around,
and you allow it to.
Hell, you probably
welcome it.
This is because you
believe (rather than think) that it knows what you want.
It doesn't.
It's nothing, more or
less, than your sense of self-esteem or self-importance.
It doesn't know what
you want.
It only knows how to
keep you safe, comfortable, and secure.
It only understands
self-preservation...
So the secret to turning
the tables on your insecure, uninitiated, tiny ego is to practice,
self-improvement
rather than self-importance.
Self-importance leads
to impotence.
Self-improvement
leads to liberation, self-empowerment, and the rise of an
initiated, self-actualized ego that's ready to take on all
comers and prepared to perpetually overcome itself.
Practice
getting out of your own way
"Be
melting snow.
Wash yourself of
yourself."
Rumi
Step one in turning the tables on your ego: get over yourself.
Understand that,
you are a fallible,
imperfect, prone to mistakes naked-ape fumbling through the
toddler-phase of its species' evolution.
You are a tiny speck
of dust in an unfathomably enormous universe that will exist
none-seconds compared to the ancient eternity of the cosmos.
That should humble you.
But your ego probably
won't allow it to. It's too damn scary. Too mortal. Too real. So
your ego is probably spoon-feeding you a healthy dose of cognitive
dissonance to prevent it from getting overwhelmed.
Hence the vital
importance of practicing getting out of your own way.
Humility is a cornerstone of self-improvement.
Humility is the
searing pain of seeing the light upon exiting Plato's Cave.
It's collapsing in a
pile of existential angst in the Desert of the Real after
transcending the Matrix.
Humility is the
ultimate psychological leveling mechanism.
It puts the ego in
check so that you can finally be authentic with yourself.
The beauty of practicing
getting out of your own way (and thus making your ego your
bitch) is that eventually your ego gets used to driving in the
back seat.
It starts to learn
how not to take itself so seriously.
It begins to see how
everything is connected to everything else.
It becomes a vital
tool in your arsenal, used to flexibly leverage reality into an
understandable construct.
In short:
it becomes
interdependent rather than codependent.
We practice getting
out of our own way so that we are humble enough to
realize that we're paraphrasing
Palahniuk,
the same decaying
organic matter as everything else, but that we're also unique
and fragile snowflakes.
And the only way to
become more than just a unique and fragile snowflake is to make
self-improvement primary to self-preservation.
We must sow a little
painful humility if we are to reap the rewards of self-empowerment.
Stop acting
like the world owes you something
"To dare
is to lose
one's footing
momentarily.
Not to dare is
to lose
oneself."
Soren
Kierkegaard
Here's the thing:
You don't deserve a
damn thing...!
Someone told you that at
some point during your fragile development and your ego has used it
as a prop ever since.
Nobody deserves anything.
You don't deserve
love.
You don't deserve to
be happy.
You don't deserve a
job.
Hell, you could even
earn those things through your own blood, sweat, and tears, and
you would still not "deserve" it.
Why...?
Because the world
simply doesn't work that way.
There are
probabilities involved.
There's the luck
factor. There's vicissitude and unexpected change to contend
with.
And the mother of
them all:
you simply cannot
control other people, unless you become a tyrant.
Only tyrants think
the world owes them something...
Your ego is a little
bitchy tyrant inside you. And until you have the courage to flip the
tables on it, your ego will continue to tyrannize you and everyone
around you.
Tricking you into
thinking you deserve the world. When really you don't deserve a
goddamn thing.
There's daring, there's
courage, there's proactive self-improvement, but there is no
"deserve."
Toss that hindering
sentiment out the window.
Defenestrate it along
with the outdated notion that "things happen for a reason."
The beauty of practicing
letting go of your sense of entitlement (and thus making your
ego your bitch) is that eventually you realize that everything is
connected to everything else.
You see how you are
the world and the world is you.
You don't need
anything because it's already a part of you.
Your ego goes from
being a self-entitled tyrant to a self-overcoming liberator.
Make mistakes
of ambition, not mistakes of sloth
"All
courses of action are risky,
so prudence is
not in avoiding danger
but calculating
risk and acting decisively.
Make mistakes of
ambition
and not mistakes
of sloth.
Develop the
strength
to do bold
things,
not the strength
to suffer."
Niccolo
Machiavelli
When you are your ego's bitch, you suffer unnecessarily.
Your tiny comfort zone is
a prison, and metal doesn't stretch. Bars are not flexible. Sure,
inside your prison everything is safe, secure, and comfortable, but
it's all just empty platitudes and sentimental delusions that you
keep telling yourself to prevent your prison from turning into a
rubber room.
But at least a rubber
room is flexible.
That's why the wise
have always advised,
going a little
crazy from time to time in order to shake things up and
shock ourselves into
awakening...
As Tony Schwartz
said,
"Let go of certainty.
The opposite isn't uncertainty. It's openness, curiosity and a
willingness to embrace paradox, rather than choose up sides.
The ultimate
challenge is to accept ourselves exactly as we are, but never
stop trying to learn and grow."
A mistake of sloth is
remaining fortified in the prison of your comfort zone.
It's allowing your
ego to continue making you its bitch by bolting the horizon and
blocking the door.
It's ignoring all
calls to adventure.
It's turning a deaf
ear to "a language older than words."
Meanwhile, Rumi is
in your soul like a Persian Yoda, pleading:
"Why do you stay in
prison, when the door is wide open?"
But no, you won't have
it.
Ego is boss.
Self-preservation is
your master.
You're in the grips of
cognitive dissonance and you can't see past your need for comfort,
security, and safety.
A mistake of ambition, on the other hand, is a leap of courage. It's
a strategic risk based upon passion, perseverance, and love.
It's saying,
"Fuck my ego! I'm
giving this a shot."
Which gets you out of
your own way by launching you past comfort, security, and safety and
into some much-needed adventure.
It's heeding the call,
listening to the pulse that connects all things, and then acting
with deep resolve on a calculated gamble.
The alternative is unnecessary suffering in the prison our ego
has erected. Either way there is suffering, but at least in the
suffering that comes from making mistakes of ambition, we are
free.
As Ajahn Chah
said,
"There are two kinds
of suffering...
There is the
suffering you run away from, which follows you everywhere.
And there is the
suffering you face directly, and so become free."
Create a less
shitty life through cyclic self-overcoming
"In all
affairs,
it's a healthy
thing now and then
to hang a
question mark
on the things
you have taken
for granted."
Bertrand Russell
So yeah, adventure hurts.
The unknown is scary, and
unexpected things can happen. Hell, you could even die. Making
mistakes of ambition is no walk in the park. Things could go wrong.
But so what...!
There are greater pains.
There are worse ways to go down.
Like making mistakes
of sloth...
Growth is painful...
Change is even more
painful. But remaining stuck in a shitty life of aggrandized ego-fellating
is arguably the worst pain of all.
This is where the art of self-overcoming comes in.
Self-overcoming is
bitch-slapping your ego out of the way, taking the reins of your
life into your hands, and proactively going about improving upon who
you were yesterday.
It's taking
Nietzsche's idea of
the Overman and running
with it.
It's a personalized
Fibonacci sequence, where your own development is
predicated upon an individualized progressive evolution that
will ultimately contribute to the evolution of the species.
Self-overcoming is
realizing that the human condition is fragile and fallible. And
that's okay...!
That's precisely why
self-overcoming is necessary.
It's a vehicle that
compels us to become robust and wise despite our inherently
fragile and fallible natures...
The ego wants to keep you
safe in your fragile and fallible comfort zone.
Self-overcoming
tears down the comfort zone and teaches the ego how to become a
flexible tool of self-improvement rather than a rigid tool of
self-preservation.
We'll still be
fragile and fallible, but we'll also be more robust and wise.
Self-overcoming is
the daily act of letting your ego know who's boss. You are...!
And no amount of
comfortable coos and warming sentiments are going to lull you back
to sleep.
You're awake.
Your comfort zone has
been stretched and has gained the flexibility to stretch even
further.
The tables have been
turned. In the poker game of Self, you've called your ego's
bluff and now you're holding all the cards.
Your
self-preservation has taken a back seat to your
self-improvement.
There's an initiation
at hand.
Your ego is ready to
become a mighty tool for self-actualization...
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