Most of us walk around with a sense of self that feels obvious, intimate, and unbroken. But what if it's completely wrong?
The Mistaken Self takes a hard look at how we build our identities out of physical sensations, memories, fleeting thoughts, and the roles we play. The solid "me" we experience is usually just a habit, be it a patchwork of interpretations, old stories, and attachments that we constantly repeat.
This isn't a self-help book filled with motivational quotes or easy comfort. Rooted in direct psychological observation and Vedantic inquiry, it breaks down the actual, hidden mechanics of our inner conflicts and emotional pressures. It exposes how this false center takes shape, how we unknowingly reinforce it, and what happens when it finally starts to crack under clear observation.
Here is what the book breaks down:
How we turn physical states into judgments about who we are.
The way memory twists past experiences into a rigid identity.
How the images in our heads feed and amplify emotional suffering.
The trap of roles, social expectations, and the exhausting pressure to be "consistent."
The underlying architecture of fear and desire.
How catching these loops in real-time can break them before they harden.
What everyday life actually looks like when this false identity starts to unravel.
If you're drawn to self-inquiry, the teachings of Krishnamurti, or just want to understand the nuts and bolts of your own mind, this is a concise, philosophical guide. For anyone who has ever felt boxed in by their own thoughts, emotions, or the need to constantly maintain a persona, this book provides a sharper lens to see what's really going on beneath the surface.