Yes, that is a more accurate wording, sense was not the right word to use.It's not the "sense" of self that is the cause, but the belief in it, the identification with it. That's where the 'need' to protect it starts. The importance in how it is seen by others.I've heard it said that the sense of self can be said to be the cause of most human suffering, and that is actually really starting to sink in.
The part that thinks it has any amount of control. The part that is scared to give up the sense of self. The stubborn part. :)Ha, yes, which part ?Part of me still resists the idea that there is no self,
Guilty for the pain I have caused others. The "bad" things I have done. If there was no control, and no self there, if there was no "I" there, then there was no choice? Those things had to happen? Had to happen in that way?So how would you feel if you discovered that It NEVER did ! That It was always an illusion. That life happened just fine without it and that the 'not fine' parts were Always because of the Belief in that control ?That "I" have no control.
Frustrated. There is a pounding at the gate, but no passing through it yet.What is your response when i tell you that what you are seeking is something you already Are and that there is only a split second of Recognition between your ignorance and en-light-enment ?
Lunch time was spent asking "Is it credible that there is no self?". While there was the typical tangent and leading off of thoughts, "I" returned to it the question over and over, then occasionally flipping it around, "Is it credible that there IS a self?". I'm trying to push past belief, push past what I've learned, and SEE the evidence that is here. I find no evidence for a credible self, just a pattern of self-creation, of associations, of assumptions. But then I get caught up in circles of thought "This body is myself" and I argue against it, "this mind is myself" and I argue against it, it seems like I have to keep proving these on a thought level, but I think all of that is merely a distraction to keep myself from seeing the truth.

