TLDR: The common phrase "my life" reflects a fundamental misunderstanding of human nature. We are not separate observers who possess life; we are expressions of one timeless life temporarily inhabiting individual form. This distinction between having a life and being life undoes the illusion of separation that causes suffering and confusion about identity.
Why We Say "My Life" But Don't Actually Have One
The phrase "my life" is so embedded in everyday speech that it passes without question. People say it constantly—"I'm building my life," "my life is hard," "I want to change my life"—and it sounds entirely natural. The language feels true because it matches our subjective experience of being an individual moving through time with our own story and circumstances.
But this linguistic habit obscures something crucial: the logical impossibility of having a life. If you possess a life, that means there is life on one side and you on the other. It creates a subject-object split where you stand apart from life, observing it, managing it, trying to control it. This separation, however intuitive it feels, is the root of the fundamental existential confusion that generates suffering.
Consider the question: who are you without life? The answer is that there is no "you" without life. Remove life from the equation and nothing remains. You cannot be separate from something that is the condition of your existence. Yet the phrase "my life" perpetuates this impossible separation at every level of speech and thought.
What Does It Mean to Be an Expression of Life?
The alternative understanding is that you are not a possession of life but an expression of it. Life itself—the one timeless life that flows through all existence—temporarily takes the form of this particular human being. You are not observing life from the outside. You are the localized form through which life is currently manifesting.
This is not metaphorical or mystical language, though it sounds that way to ears trained in subject-object dualism. It is a description of how existence actually operates. The timeless life that animates all of reality—the intelligence that drives cellular processes, grows plants, circulates blood, generates thought—is what you are at your core. The form changes. The body has a birth and will have a death. But the life itself is neither born nor dies; it simply assumes different shapes across time and space.
When you recognize this, the possessive pronoun "my" loses its referent. There is no separate self that owns life. There is only life, temporarily organized as this person named [your name], with these particular memories and experiences and capacities. The person-form is real and functional—it is the vehicle through which life operates—but it is not the owner of life. It is life in motion.
The Illusion of Separation Creates Suffering
The belief that you have a life—that you are separate from it—generates much of the psychological suffering that characterizes human existence. When you believe you are a separate self who must acquire, protect, and control a life, you live in constant tension. Life becomes something external that you must manage. If your life is good, you feel secure temporarily. If your life is threatened, you feel fear. Your entire emotional state depends on defending the boundary between you and your life.
This separation is also the source of existential anxiety. If you have a life, then your life can be taken away. Death becomes the ultimate loss—the moment when the life you possess is removed and you cease. This generates a subtle but pervasive dread that most people carry beneath their daily concerns.
In contrast, if you recognize that you are not separate from life but are life itself, the entire structure of threat dissolves. Life cannot be taken from you because you are not holding it as a possession. Death may change the form—the body ceases, the continuity of memory and personality ends—but the life itself cannot die. It simply exits this particular expression and continues in other forms. When you understand yourself as life rather than as a self that has life, death loses its existential sting.
The Timeless Life Behind Individual Form
The recognition that you are an expression of one timeless life requires understanding what that timeless life actually is. It is not personal consciousness or individual awareness. The individual mind is a temporary phenomenon that arises and dissolves. Before you were born, this particular mind did not exist. After you die, it will not exist. That mind is not timeless; it is time-bound.
The timeless life is what exists before mind, beneath mind, and continues after mind. It is being itself—the raw existence that precedes all form and continues underlying all forms. It is conscious in the sense that it is aware, responsive, intelligent—the universe does not operate mechanically but responds and adapts—but this consciousness is not localized in any individual brain. It is the field from which all individual consciousness emerges.
You are temporarily the form through which this universal aliveness expresses itself as a particular human being. Your thoughts, your sensations, your memories, your personality—all of these are real and functional, but none of them constitute your fundamental nature. Your fundamental nature is the timeless life itself, of which all these temporal phenomena are temporary manifestations.
Moving Beyond Conventional Language
Does this mean you should never use the phrase "my life" again? Not necessarily. Language is conventional, and to function in the world, you often need to use conventional phrases. You can say "my life" while not actually believing in the illusion of separation it implies. The distinction is not between using the phrase and not using it, but between believing the phrase represents ultimate truth and recognizing it as a convenient linguistic convention.
The same distinction applies to other conventional phrases: "my body," "my thoughts," "my emotions." These are functional ways of pointing to the temporary form-phenomena that are currently organizing themselves through this person. But beneath the functional utility of the phrase lies a deeper truth: none of these things are truly possessed by a separate self, because there is no separate self to possess them. They arise within and as expressions of the one life.
Where to Go From Here
If this understanding resonates, the invitation is to test it directly. Rather than accepting it as a belief, investigate your own experience. Try to locate the separate self that owns life. In deep meditation or in moments of genuine presence, what actually remains when you stop thinking and return to simple awareness? Can you find a boundary between yourself and life? Can you locate where life ends and you begin? Most people, when they inquire this way, discover that the separation is not actual—it is a construct of conceptual mind. What remains is aliveness itself, unnamed and undivided. This is what you are.




