You know roughly where your body is at all times, but where in it is your “self”?

Your center of mass is around the solar plexus, yet that doesn’t seem to universally be where people feel the center of their self to be. Most people feel they “are” right behind their eyes, probably in the brain.

Sometimes people have out-of-body experiences, completely changing their anchor for a while.

When pointing at themselves, people tend to point a thumb at their chest or face. Do they feel differently about it, or is it just convenience?

Are you a body with a head full of thinking goop and sensors on top, or are you a head sitting on a body?

And wherever you feel you are, have you felt different at any time? Can you change it?

Personally, I can’t separate the feeling of self from my vision, so “I” am directly behind my eyeballs and I can’t change it.

  • Mostly_Frogs@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I take the Buddhist view that what we call the self is a misconception or misunderstanding. While you do exist, there isn’t a soul or some permanent entity that takes residence and jumps around before or after death.

    Thus, you can ask questions like these and get a million different answers because the question is not valid. It’s what the Buddha would call proliferation, or basically hot air. There isn’t an answer, why ask the question?

    Don’t mistake this for a cynical view, though. A good Buddhist is very happy because even though the idea of a self is false, freeing yourself from all of these self-based concepts and desires leads to great peace. The obsession with self and self-based craving is what leads to any kind of unhappiness.

    • Deestan@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Intersting view! As to why I ask, I am not looking to find the definite correct answer. I want to know what people feel and hoe differently they do so, whether what they feel is real or illusory.

      • JungleJim@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        I just have to say I think you just stumped the Buddha. If I’m understanding, then the reason for proliferation is for the wisdom gained from outside perspective. The analysis of 1000 “wrong” answers can give insight as to the nature of reality or the “right” answer.

  • dog@suppo.fi
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    1 year ago

    You are mostly your brain, which extends to the rest of your body.

    The thing about OOB cases is that the human brain is really good at faking information, or just generating it out of thin air.

    In fact it never stops doing that, unless it is allowed to completely die.

    If a person is resurrected, the brain generates “filler” information for the duration you were “out”.

    For some, that is seeing an “afterlife”.

    There is no universally specified “afterlife”, it’s based entirely on culture, and what the person has grown to believe in, even if they don’t believe it anymore.

  • superkret@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    I am a hive mind of gut bacteria steering a flesh puppet to make it shove food inside my environment.

  • BellyPurpledGerbil@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Quite literally you are your brain, trying to account for the entire body and mind as the self simultaneously. But you may catch yourself thinking or saying things like “I can’t wrap my brain around this.” Isn’t that odd? Your brain refers to itself as my brain. Is that a linguistic issue or is your sense of perspective off?

    “Don’t you have a heart?” Why do we imply that our sense of compassion is only located in an organ that just pumps blood? That clearly can’t be the case.

    We know cases where someone gets a brain tumor and suddenly becomes violent or unfeeling. When the brain is damaged either during life or during gestation, we know that we can lose all manner of things: cognition, motor skills, memory, emotions, etc. It’s all the brain.

    What confuses the issue is everything the brain is attached to. What I think all conscious humans do is try to make sense of the mind-body connection. I feel tired, that’s not just my brain feeling tired. I can feel tired in every single part of my body independently or all together. “I” am the brain. If I lose an arm, I don’t lose my sense of self. But losing important functions can damage the self I’ve constructed of myself. If I lose my eyesight I will be a very different person when I’m unable to visually enjoy video games, movies, art, nature. But clearly blind people still have a self. If it sits behind their eyes, will it move? Adapt to their ears?

    All this to say, your self is self constructed. It’s malleable. But make no mistake that the source of where self and consciousness are maintained is the brain.

  • scarabic@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    This post illustrates well why some Buddhists, among others, regard the self to be an illusion. When called to locate it or bring it forth, we ultimately can’t do so.

  • atlasraven31@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    My brain silently groaned “Ugh, I need more coffee to process something like this so early! Body, take me to the coffee.”

    I feel this is an answer to the question.

  • OceanSoap@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Hub. Interesting. My sense of self tends to be around my shoulder/back of head/neck area. I don’t get the feeling that I’m right behind my eyeballs, my sense of self is A bit lower and further back than that. Like, if I were centered between my ears, I’d have to move a bit lower and a bit more back.

    Such a strange thing to have to focus on.

  • Kjatten@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I don’t even know that, I don’t particularly feel like I am either my body, head, or brain. I’ve never felt that I am a part of this body.

  • cholesterol@lemmy.wtf
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    1 year ago

    It would be interesting to know whether the location of your ‘self’ is tied to your dominant sense. So people blind from birth could be ‘between their ears’? Which isn’t that different, but would still produce slightly different answers. And how about people missing both hearing and vision? Could a person be ‘in their hands’? ‘Up their nose’? I’d better stop.

  • Markimus@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    There’s a book called Impro by Keith Johnstone.

    It’s a book about improvisation, though in there there’s a very interesting part on moving your center around when it comes to character work.

    So long as the centre remains in the middle of your chest (pretend it’s a few inches deep), you will feel that you are still yourself and in full command, only more energetically and harmoniously so, with your body approaching an “ideal type”.

    As soon as you try to shift the centre to some other place within or outside your body, you will feel that your whole psychological and physical attitude will change, just as it changes when you step into an imaginary body.

    You will notice that the centre is able to draw and concentrate your whole being into one spot from which your activity emanates and radiates.

    (Johnstone, 1987, p. 179).

    • Markimus@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      You can also imagine a movable centre.

      Let it sway slowly before your forehead and circle your head from time to time, and you will sense the psychology of a bewildered person.

      Let it circle irregularly around your whole body, in varying tempos, now going up and now sinking down, and the effect will no doubt be one of intoxication.

      (Johnstone, 1987, p. 180).