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I, Self

German: Ich

Common meaning:
The self, the “I,” the subject of experience
Clear meaning:
The point at which the field experiences itself as separate—not identity, but the structure that holds perception in form.

I is not wrong,
but it is not origin.
It is the scaffold
that organizes experience
so the One can perceive itself
as Many.

Structurally, the I is the mirror
that thinks it is the face.

It is the tool of separation—
not as mistake,
but as the stage for remembering.

The I is not who you are— it is the place where you forget you are more.