Body Ego
The ego is first and foremost a body-ego, in the sense that the
self-demarcations that form in our consciousness during infancy
are based on our sensory experience of our bodies as distinct
from other objects. The delusion is taking these body-boundaries
to define and limit our sense of who and what we are. On the physical
level it is true that each of us has physical boundaries and that
this body is separate from that body, but on the level of consciousness
these boundaries are permeable. The edges of our bodies do not
define where we end and others begin, although if we have this
conviction it will feel that way. When we recognize that this
experience is a delusion, we see that the ego boundaries we have
used to define ourselves are only mental constructs. We realize
that we have been holding onto an image of our bodies in order
to define ourselves as entities. (Facets of Unity, p 104)