TLDR: The ego maintains itself through identification with problems. Rather than seeing difficulty as something to solve and release, the mind has built an entire narrative identity around struggle. Presence—a state of awareness beyond thought—dismantles this attachment by revealing that problems are not what you are. The more you identify with your problems, the more energy you invest in their persistence; the more you are present, the simpler and more solvable they become.
How the Ego Uses Problems to Maintain Identity
One of the most counterintuitive observations about human psychology is that people become deeply attached to their problems. This attachment is not random; it serves a function. The ego—the sense of separate self created by thought and memory—has evolved to use problems as a core part of its identity structure.
When you say "I have anxiety," "I'm struggling with my family," or "I can't get ahead financially," you are not just describing a situation. You are making the problem part of your sense of self. The ego uses this identification as a way to exist. It says: "I am the person with this problem. This difficulty is who I am." Over time, this identification becomes so seamless that you no longer distinguish between yourself and your problems. They feel inseparable.
The danger in this dynamic is that the ego then resists the very solutions that would dissolve the problem. If the problem disappears, so does a significant portion of the ego's identity. On some level—not consciously, but operating underneath awareness—the ego works to maintain the problem because without it, the self-image collapses. This is why some people unconsciously sabotage their own solutions or find themselves repeatedly returning to the same patterns of difficulty.
Why Presence Makes Life Simpler
Presence is fundamentally different from the problem-centered consciousness that dominates ordinary thought. Presence is awareness of what is actually happening in this moment, without the layer of conceptual interpretation that the mind adds.
When you are present, several things shift:
- Problems lose their psychological weight: A problem exists primarily as a story the mind tells about the present moment. When you step out of thought and into direct perception, the emotional charge around the problem diminishes. What felt overwhelming becomes simply a situation to address.
- Solutions become obvious: The thinking mind, caught in loops of worry and identification, often cannot see practical ways forward. Presence brings clarity because it operates from a different level of consciousness—one that can perceive patterns and solutions the anxious mind misses.
- Energy returns to you: When you stop investing psychic energy in maintaining your identification with a problem, that energy becomes available for actual living and creating. The constant internal narrative about your difficulty requires enormous attention; when that stops, you feel lighter.
- Fear diminishes: Most problems are amplified by fear about future consequences. Presence anchors you in the only moment where anything can actually happen—now. In the present moment, the problem often appears much more manageable than the catastrophic story your mind has constructed.
The Resistance of the Ego to Simplicity
The paradox is that while presence makes life simpler, the ego actively resists it. This is because the ego's complexity is its camouflage. A simple, clear mind is dangerous to the ego because it can see through the ego's mechanisms. The ego survives through confusion, through the multiplication of thoughts, through the construction of elaborate problem narratives that justify its existence.
When you offer the ego a path to simplicity—through presence, meditation, or any practice that quiets the thinking mind—the ego experiences this as a threat. The resistance you feel when you try to be present is not laziness or lack of ability; it is the ego's defensive response to a force that would dissolve it. The mind may say, "This is pointless," or "I don't have time for this," or "This won't solve my real problems." These are all forms of resistance protecting the ego's territory.
Furthermore, the ego has learned that problems are useful. They explain why life is hard. They justify why you haven't achieved what you want. They create a sense of continuity—the "me" who had this problem yesterday and will have it tomorrow. Problems give the ego a narrative arc, a coherent story. Without problems, the ego must confront the fact that there is a vast, unconditioned awareness underneath the identity it has constructed.
The Mechanics of Identification
Identification with problems operates through several mechanisms:
Repetitive thinking: The mind returns obsessively to the same problem, chewing it over from different angles. This repetition deepens the groove of identification. Every time you think about your problem, you reinforce the belief that this difficulty is inherent to who you are.
Emotional reinforcement: Problems trigger emotions—fear, anger, shame, anxiety. The ego uses these emotions as proof that the problem is real and significant. "If I feel this strongly about it, it must be a core part of my identity." The emotion becomes the evidence.
Social validation: When you talk about your problems to others, you receive attention and often sympathy. This social reinforcement makes the identification stronger. People may even come to know you primarily through your problems: "Oh, that's Sarah—she's dealing with that health issue," or "That's Mike—he's always stressed about work." The external recognition of your identification makes it feel more real and more permanent.
Comparative identity: Identifying with problems also allows for comparison and a sense of relative position. If your problem is worse than someone else's, you can feel a perverse sense of superiority or specialness. If it's better than someone else's, you can feel grateful. Either way, the problem becomes a marker of where you stand in relation to others.
Breaking the Identification Through Presence
The way out of problem-identification is not to fight the ego directly, which only gives it more substance, but to cultivate presence. Presence is the natural antidote to identification because it reveals the distinction between awareness itself and the content of awareness.
In a state of presence, you can observe a problem—a financial difficulty, a relationship conflict, a health concern—without identifying with it. The problem is something happening; it is not what you are. This shift from "I am my problem" to "I am aware of a problem" is subtle but fundamental. It restores your freedom. Once you are no longer fused with the problem, you can relate to it more intelligently. You can ask: What does this situation actually require? What action, if any, needs to be taken? What can I let go of?
Presence also reveals that most of the suffering around a problem is mental rather than actual. The problem itself—the specific situation—is often manageable. But the secondary layer of worry, rumination, self-blame, and future catastrophizing is what makes it unbearable. Presence dissolves this secondary layer because it operates outside of the thinking mind.
Where to Go From Here
If you recognize yourself in this pattern of problem-identification, the first step is simply to notice it without judgment. Notice how often you define yourself by what's difficult in your life. Notice the stories you tell about your problems and how those stories make the problems feel more solid and permanent than they actually are.
Then, practice returning to the present moment, even briefly. Feel your body. Notice what's actually happening right now, separate from your thoughts about it. These simple acts of presence begin to create distance between you and your identified problems. Over time, this distance reveals that you are much larger than your problems—you are the awareness in which they appear. From that realization, both simplicity and freedom become possible.




