What if the self you've spent your life building… was never real to begin with? This groundbreaking work dismantles the illusion at the heart of human experience: the belief in a separate, enduring self. Blending nonduality and neuroscience, Vedanta for modern thinkers, and cutting-edge cognitive science, it invites you into a radical unlearning—one that doesn’t just change how you think, but how you exist. Drawing from ancient spiritual insight and modern brain science, this book reveals how our sense of "I" is not a truth, but a self identity illusion—a survival mechanism, a story we mistake for substance. Through profound inquiry and accessible exploration, you'll learn: - Why the ego is not a flaw, but a function—and why clinging to it fuels suffering - How ego dissolution can lead to deeper clarity, compassion, and creative freedom - What awareness without self really feels like—and how to glimpse it in everyday life - How to live, work, and love without being trapped in the “story of me” - Why spiritual seeking often reinforces the very self it wants to transcend This book is for seekers, skeptics, and anyone haunted by the question: Who am I? It’s for those who’ve glimpsed the limits of mindfulness and now hunger for something deeper—mindfulness beyond ego. Whether you’re exploring existential spirituality, recovering from identity crisis, or simply tired of chasing improvement, this book will meet you where the self collapses—and something timeless opens. A luminous guide for those ready to go beyond what is consciousness really, and into the mystery that has never needed a name.
The Myth of the Self
SKU: 9789371777100
$23.99 Regular Price
$19.27Sale Price
- Julian Avidan is a contemplative thinker and storyteller whose work explores the uncharted spaces between science, spirituality, and selfhood. Drawn to both the rigor of neuroscience and the quiet revelations of ancient wisdom, his writing seeks to dismantle the false boundaries between inner and outer worlds. Avidan has spent decades immersed in traditions of nonduality, existential philosophy, and consciousness studies—not to master them, but to unlearn what obscures our direct experience of being. Through retreats, dialogues, and deep inquiry, he invites readers to let go of the self they think they are—and to meet the mystery that remains. The Myth of the Self is his most intimate and radical offering yet: a quiet revolution in how we understand identity, ego, and the strange miracle of awareness.