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Me? Myself? I?

Meditations on self and ego


There is you, and there is everybody else. And then there is your child.

The child is not just another of everybody else. The child is you.

Yet not you; someone other than you.

The child is both -- for the child is born of the Essence that transcends you and other.

We are children of the Infinite Light.


You need to take ownership of those things important in life -- the charity you give, the kind deeds you do, the Torah you learn and teach. You can't just say, "This is G-d's business, He has to take care of it." It has to hurt when it doesn't work out; you have to dance with joy when it does.

That is why G-d created the "I" -- so that we would do these things as owners, not as hired hands.


To achieve wonders takes a fearless heart and a humble mind.

True, courage and humility are two opposite directions for the soul to travel at once. But they take place in two distinct chambers: The mind awakens to its nothingness and the heart G-d gave you is bared in all its brazen power.


The sages said about arrogance, "Damned is the one who has it, and damned is the one who does not."

Arrogance makes a mortal being into an idol. But without it, how can we change the world?


Do good with all your ego. Say, "I need to make this happen." Say, "I have to see this done."

Not only is this "I" permissible, it is crucial to getting things done.

So what is forbidden? To believe the "I" belongs to you.


The ego is not to be destroyed. It, too, is a creation of G-d - and all that He made, He made for His glory.

Only this: that the ego must know that it is a creation, and that all He made, He made for His glory.


Today you did some wonderful things. It's okay to tell yourself that. There's a time to feel some satisfaction with what you have accomplished today.

As long as you're never satisfied with tomorrow.


Ultimately, your soul finds there is something even more momentous than herself. There is her purpose.

To accomplish, to heal, to make better -- these, she discovers, take precedent over her very being.

And in that moment of discovery she graduates from being G-d's little child to become absorbed within the body of the King.


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By Tzvi Freeman   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author

From the wisdom of the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Schneerson, of righteous memory; words and condensation by Tzvi Freeman. To order Tzvi's book, "Bringing Heaven Down to Earth, click here.


The content on this page is copyrighted by the author, publisher and/or Chabad.org, and is produced by Chabad.org. If you enjoyed this article, we encourage you to distribute it further, provided that you comply with the copyright policy.
 

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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: May 29, 2008
wow i have never understood this concept, and in a few words it became soo clear!
Posted By rochi n.

Posted: Oct 1, 2004
Hadassah
There is so much insight in these articles! I love reading them! This last portion reminds me of Esther (Hadassah). To approach the king in the inner court who is not summoned meant death; "except for the one to whom the king shall extend the gold scepter so that he may live." Although the Mitzvot pronounced us as unworthy of walking into G-d's presence, His scepter of steadfast love was extended to us, and He granted to us Life, and our purpose. We became as G-d's wife "absorbed within the body of the King" to complete our purpose as Hadassah did: "To accomplish, to heal, to make better". For we have "attained the royal position" "for such a time as this", and it must 'take precedence over our very being'!
Posted By Anonymous, Santa Rosa, Calif./USA

Posted: Aug 17, 2004
You just gave to me
Some wonderfull stuff about the ego indeed, thank you very much
Posted By vincent meijer, The Hague, Netherlands



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By Tzvi Freeman
The Heresy of Kindness
Divine Madness
Tradition or Progress?
Adam
Unidolatry
The Marriage
The Moon and Us
Me? Myself? I?
Meditations on Purpose
How Sin Started
Words of Song
A Dwelling Below
Hi-tech Connectivity
At-onement
Chana's Prayer
Showing 9 to 23 of 47

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Ego & Selfhood (59 articles)

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