Sorry for not getting back before, busy weekend ...
Things are just emerging. There is a noticer, but it isn't an "I" or "me". This all happens in or around this body-mind, but no ownership is involved. There is no "I" agent causing things to happen. The "I" agent comes to the fore more when the "you are a victim" thought arises.
In direct answer to your questions, yes, ownership increases as the story gets more involved. The "I" seems to appear in the story which is interesting since I have often heard that "I" is just a thought, but have struggled to see it. Still not absolutely clear, have not seen it absolutely clearly. There is another voice arising "no ... 'I' is a real, independent entity which happens to appear within each story."Nice - keep looking. Notice when thought story gets involved what happens with ownership. Notice also the weight of the story. Do you bring the stories? Or do they just appear? Do you have a choice to become involved with them or not?
The stories are not chosen, but either seem to come from memory, memories in which a younger version of this body-mind was present, or some imagined scenario which is either pleasant or bad (e.g. losing my wife/a child - "how would you cope ... you couldn't manage etc etc, or being 'heroic' in an imagined situation as if this would somehow prove the "I", along the lines of "imagine you did such and such a thing then everyone would know about you").
It seems however, for quite a lot of the time, life just flows, the "I" is either not present or very quiet. If I am struggling to solve a problem a work, there is invariably the story "you're such a lousy programmer ... look at your co-workers ... look how quickly they solve problems". That kind of story often emerges if this body-mind tries to do almost anything or even contemplates starting doing something new (e.g. DIY stuff).
The weight of the story ... hmm ... interesting ... I think this relates to the above paragraph. The "I" and the intensity of the story are related. The "I" is more clearly seen/identified when the story is intense, particularly negative stories involving pain, failure, fear. But there is also the temptation to egotism when something goes right ... a voice temptingly saying "look how wonderful you are ... etc etc" and emerging after that, another story trying to resist that temptation. Why the sense of resistance? It must be another conflicting voice saying "you really shouldn't take credit ..."
But yes, they - the stories - just appear just like the sound of the birds singing, and just as the hearing to the singing just happens so the story involving this body-mind, or put another way, "my" involvement in the story. But similar to writing, sometimes what is written just happens - there is no "I" and there is no witness, and at other times the witness appears saying "Look! Writing is happening and it happening of its own accord - there is no "I" writing". Not sure if that (the witness perspective) is itself a story ...
Thx again, Sarah
S

