OK. Thanks for your clear response.
Reading what you wrote, you say you want to know what is true. I invite you to read the questions and look at your own experience, right now, to answer. If you just tell me what you think, that doesn't count as an answer. In fact, if you look at the conditions you agreed to, you've promised to tell the truth based on your actual experience.
Again, you said you want to know what is true, and that you are curious. Let's say that counts as a desire (to know stuff), and a belief about yourself.
Honestly - if you reflect on what you wrote above, do you feel good because you think something along the lines of "I am a curious and honest person, willing to fearlessly face the truth, no matter where it leads. And I'm not irrational and airy-fairy - unlike everyone else, I'm rational and care about what is true..." ? That is, do you think that and feel good when you have that sort of thought?
I feel good about the part that says "I am a curious and honest person, willing to fearlessly face the truth, no matter where it leads." Not about "And I'm not irrational and airy-fairy - unlike everyone else, I'm rational and care about what is true..." That's because it has a negative perception of everyone else in it. Like I'm somehow better. I'm not. And I love people and respect their opinions and the way they are. THAT, again though, I do feel good about.
When you answer questions, where does the answer come from? There was a moment when you were just contemplating a question. And then somehow you typed out an answer. What is your experience (in terms of your senses) when you answer a question? Eg. someone asks, "do you own a pet dog?" or "what is the last movie you saw?" or "why do you want to explore your sense of self" do you do anything to create the answer? What is this "you" like that answers questions about yourself? Does it have a location, color, size, boundary, etc?
The answer seems to come out of nowhere. After reading the question I had an immediate response to it, it was a thought and a feeling. Then I needed to think about how to formulate my answer and then I typed out that answer. In terms of my senses, I saw the letters on the screen and feel my fingertips on the keyboard as I'm typing.
I'm not sure what this "you" is, I can't identify it as a single thing. It's a combination of feelings, thoughts, awareness, etc. Which together create my identity. If I look at what is going on with my regarding my feelings, thoughts, beliefs, etc., that combination is what I can see as "me". Not my body though. If the body dies, the identity dies (which is what I believe), or if I'm wrong, it lives on but not in the same body. So the identity being me, owns the body.
I'll listen to that one again soon.
Do you choose to want to know what is true? That is, do you choose your desires?
Do you feel better about yourself because you want to know what is true? Do you feel
As I see it, I (the identity) chooses to want to know what is true. And some desires I choose, some just come up. I do feel better about myself because I want to know what is true, since I see it as a good trait and I'm proud of it. And yes, I feel. The identity/"me" has those feelings.