TLDR: Ram Dass teaches one of the core insights of contemplative practice: the distinction between the thinking "I" (the ego-mind) and the observing "I" (the witness or pure awareness). This simple but profound recognition—that you can watch your thoughts and emotions arise and pass without identifying as them—is foundational to liberation. By learning to locate yourself in the space of witnessing rather than in the content of thoughts, you fundamentally shift your relationship to experience and begin to access the deeper consciousness that yogic and Buddhist traditions describe as your true nature.
What is the Observing "I"?
Most people live primarily identified with the thinking mind—the stream of thoughts, judgments, and narratives that constantly unfold. This is what Ram Dass calls the thinking "I": the ego-self that takes itself to be the narrator, the one who "has" experiences. But there is another "I," deeper and more fundamental, that simply witnesses this entire process. This observing "I" is not separate from you; rather, it is what you actually are when you step back from your identification with mental content.
The observing "I" is sometimes called witness consciousness, pure awareness, or atman in Sanskrit. It is the capacity to be aware of your thoughts without being lost in them, to notice emotions as they arise without becoming them. When you say "I am angry," you are identifying with anger. But the awareness that knows the anger is distinct from the anger itself. That knowing—that empty, non-judgmental awareness—is the observing "I."
How Can You Access the Observing "I" in Daily Life?
The practice is deceptively simple: notice the space between yourself and your thoughts. Ram Dass teaches that this is not an intellectual understanding but an actual shift in the locus of your awareness. In meditation, for instance, you might sit and watch thoughts arise. Rather than following them or pushing them away, you simply notice them appearing and disappearing like clouds in the sky. The one who notices is the observing "I."
You can practice this anywhere. In the midst of a strong emotion—frustration, fear, desire—pause and ask: "Who is aware of this feeling?" This question is not rhetorical; it is an invitation to locate yourself in the awareness itself rather than in the content of the emotion. You might notice a subtle shift: instead of being the frustration, you become the space in which frustration is arising. This space—this awareness—is already present. You are not creating it; you are simply redirecting attention toward it.
This practice has profound consequences. The thinking "I" is always in motion, always grasping or rejecting, always creating a narrative of self. But the observing "I" is still, untouched, free. By resting in this awareness, even briefly, you taste what yogic traditions call your true nature—consciousness itself, not caught in the trap of identification.
Why Does This Distinction Matter Spiritually?
The entire trajectory of spiritual practice, from Ram Dass's perspective, hinges on this shift. As long as you identify exclusively with the thinking "I," you remain trapped in a limited, personal sense of self that is constantly vulnerable, constantly defending itself, constantly seeking security and pleasure. The ego-mind creates suffering because it cannot be still; it cannot accept things as they are.
But when you locate yourself in the observing "I," you enter a fundamentally different relationship to experience. You are no longer identified with your story; you are the awareness in which your story unfolds. This does not mean becoming indifferent or detached in a deadening sense. Rather, it means becoming free from the compulsive reactivity of the ego while remaining open and responsive to life.
In the traditions Ram Dass draws from—Hindu Advaita Vedanta, Buddhist Dzogchen, and related schools—the recognition of witness consciousness is considered enlightenment or awakening. Not as a distant goal, but as what is already true. The "I" that is observing right now, as you read these words, is already free, already whole. The spiritual path is simply the refinement of noticing this.
What Happens When You Confuse the Two "I"s?
When you mistake the thinking "I" for your true self, suffering compounds. You believe your anxious thoughts are facts about reality. You believe your self-image is who you actually are. You defend it, improve it, worry about it. This is the root of what Buddhist psychology calls dukkha—the unsatisfactoriness that permeates ego-based life. The thinking "I" is always incomplete, always lacking, always reaching for the next thing that will make it feel real or secure.
The practice of separating these two "I"s is therefore profoundly liberating. It is not that you get rid of the thinking mind—the mind continues to do its job of thinking, planning, remembering. But you are no longer enslaved to it. You have discovered that you are the awareness in which the mind operates, not the mind itself.
How Does This Relate to Meditation Practice?
In meditation, this recognition unfolds naturally over time. When you sit quietly and watch your breath or your body, thoughts will arise. The instruction in most meditation systems is simple: notice the thought, and return to the breath or the object of meditation. But what is "noticing"? It is the observing "I" coming into awareness. Each time you notice a thought and let it go, you are practicing the recognition of witness consciousness.
As meditation deepens, the boundary between the observer and the observed can become more porous. Sometimes the thinking mind quiets almost completely, and you are left in pure awareness—the observing "I" without much to observe except itself, or rather, the felt sense of being. This is sometimes called the witness experiencing itself, or pure consciousness. It is not blank or empty in a deadening way; it is full, luminous, and aware.
Can the Observing "I" Experience Enlightenment?
There is a subtle point here that Ram Dass's teachings touch on. The observing "I" is not the same as the ego, but it is also not yet the ultimate reality in non-dual traditions. Some spiritual systems distinguish between witness consciousness and pure non-dual awareness, where even the distinction between observer and observed collapses. From that perspective, the ultimate realization is not "I am the witness" but rather "I am," period—pure being-awareness with no subject-object division.
However, for most practitioners, the recognition of the observing "I" is a profound and genuinely transformative step. It breaks the stranglehold of ego-identification and opens the door to deeper realization. Ram Dass's teaching emphasizes this accessible recognition: you can notice right now that there is an awareness observing your experience. That noticing is itself the shift the whole spiritual path points to.
Where to go from here
Begin with simple observation. In your next moment of sitting quietly, or even in the midst of daily activity, pause and ask: "What is aware right now?" Do not try to experience something exotic or distant. Simply notice the awareness that is already present, looking out through your eyes, knowing your experience. This is the observing "I." Visit it regularly in meditation or in moments of pause, and let the distinction between the thinking "I" and the witnessing "I" become clearer through direct experience rather than concepts alone.



