The Ego Illusion: Understanding the Root of Our Suffering
We all know what it’s like to feel a sense of “I.”
“I want this.”
“I don’t like that.”
“This happened to me.”
It feels natural — even obvious. But according to Sri Ramana Maharishi, one of India’s most revered sages, this sense of “I” — what we call the ego — is actually a kind of illusion. Not a fantasy, but something that doesn’t have real, independent existence.
Let’s unpack this together, like two friends walking through a quiet question.
The Ego Has No Form of Its Own
In his 25th verse of Ulladu Narpadu (Forty Verses on Reality), Ramana gives us a powerful insight:
“The ego rises by holding on to a form, lives by clinging to that form, feeds on sense-experiences, and grows through habitual tendencies (vasanas). Then, it drops one form and picks up another — always running, always escaping when you try to see it clearly.”
In other words, the ego isn’t something solid. It’s more like a shadow — it needs something else to appear. It “borrows” identity from the body, the mind, our roles, our past — and then says, “This is me.”
When we identify with that borrowed self, we get caught in the trap: craving pleasure, avoiding pain, holding grudges, fearing the future. The ego feeds on this — always needing something more to feel “enough.”
Why This Matters
Most of our stress comes from egoic reactions:
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We feel insulted.
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We want recognition.
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We compare constantly.
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We carry our stories like heavy bags.
But when we really look for this “ego” — when we stop and ask, “Who is the ‘I’ that is hurt, or craving, or fearing?” — something strange happens.
It starts to fade.
Not because we crushed it with effort.
But because we saw that it never had a shape of its own.
So What’s the Practice?
Don’t try to fight your ego. That’s just the ego pretending to be spiritual!
Instead, become curious.
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When you feel triggered, pause and ask: “Who is feeling this?”
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When pride arises, ask: “Is this coming from truth, or from a need to prove something?”
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When you feel small, remember: “This ‘I’ that’s suffering… is it real, or is it just a habit?”
Ramana called this atma vichara — self-inquiry. A gentle, honest turning inward. Not analysis. Just observation. A return to the stillness behind all the stories.
Because when we stop feeding the ego, what remains isn’t emptiness — it’s peace. Awareness. Bliss.
And that, he says, is your true nature.