EveryEvent Dublin

Parcourir tous les Events

Find every event in Dublin

events

Concerts & Live Music
Festivals
Sports & Recreation
Food & Drink
Arts & Culture
Community
Family & Kids
Nightlife
Comedy
Theater
Destinations populaires
BaliSedonaLos AngelesCosta RicaNew YorkSan FranciscoAustinMiamiJoshua TreeTulum
Voir toutes les catégoriesVoir toutes les destinations

Explorer toutes les fonctionnalités

Des outils puissants pour développer vos événements

Fonctionnalités de la plateforme

Tarification dynamique intelligente
Catégories de billets
Places assignées
Récupération des paniers abandonnés
Récupération des visiteurs
Dons & Prix variables
Système d'affiliation
Scanner de billets
Codes promo
Questions personnalisées
Partage de billets
Ventes additionnelles & Options
Analyses & Rapports
Séquences d'emails
Liste d'attente / Notifier / Rappeler
Explorer
Discovery HubArtists & PerformersVenuesKnowledge Base
Voir toutes les fonctionnalitésÀ propos
TarifsBlog
Parcourir tous les événements

events

Concerts & Live MusicFestivalsSports & RecreationFood & DrinkArts & CultureCommunityFamily & KidsNightlife

Destinations populaires

BaliSedonaLos AngelesCosta RicaNew YorkSan Francisco

Explorer

Discovery HubArtists & PerformersVenuesKnowledge Base

Fonctionnalités de la plateforme

Tarification dynamique intelligenteCatégories de billetsPlaces assignéesRécupération des paniers abandonnésRécupération des visiteursDons & Prix variablesSystème d'affiliationScanner de billetsCodes promoQuestions personnaliséesPartage de billetsVentes additionnelles & OptionsAnalyses & RapportsSéquences d'emailsListe d'attente / Notifier / Rappeler
Voir toutes les fonctionnalitésÀ propos
TarifsBlog
ConnexionS'inscrireOrganisateurs d'événements
  • Browse All Events
  • Concerts & Live Music
  • Festivals
  • Sports & Recreation
  • Food & Drink
  • Arts & Culture
  • Community
  • Family & Kids
  • Nightlife
  • Toutes les catégories →
  • All Destinations →
  • For Promoters
  • For Artists
  • For Venues
  • For Festivals
  • For Event Spaces
  • For Nonprofits
  • For Bloggers
  • For Speakers
  • Brand Ambassador
  • Case Studies
  • Réseau de 350K+ acheteurs
  • Récupération des paniers abandonnés
  • Tarification dynamique intelligente
  • Catégories de billets
  • Événements récurrents
  • Places assignées
  • Système d'affiliation
  • Liste d'attente / Notifier
  • Scanner de billets
  • Widget intégrable
  • Event Syndication
  • Message Center
  • Integrations
  • Reports
  • Toutes les fonctionnalités →
  • À propos
  • The Ecosystem
  • Blog
  • Glossaire
  • Inspiration
  • Centre d'aide
  • Contact
  • Documentation API
  • Ressources de marque
  • Carrières
  • Presse
  • Conditions d'utilisation
  • Politique de confidentialité

Events

  • Browse All Events
  • Concerts & Live Music
  • Festivals
  • Sports & Recreation
  • Food & Drink
  • Arts & Culture
  • Community
  • Family & Kids
  • Nightlife
  • Toutes les catégories →

Getaways

  • All Destinations →

For Organizers

  • For Promoters
  • For Artists
  • For Venues
  • For Festivals
  • For Event Spaces
  • For Nonprofits
  • For Bloggers
  • For Speakers
  • Brand Ambassador
  • Case Studies

Fonctionnalités

  • Réseau de 350K+ acheteurs
  • Récupération des paniers abandonnés
  • Tarification dynamique intelligente
  • Catégories de billets
  • Événements récurrents
  • Places assignées
  • Système d'affiliation
  • Liste d'attente / Notifier
  • Scanner de billets
  • Widget intégrable
  • Event Syndication
  • Message Center
  • Integrations
  • Reports
  • Toutes les fonctionnalités →

Entreprise

  • À propos
  • The Ecosystem
  • Blog
  • Glossaire
  • Inspiration
  • Centre d'aide
  • Contact
  • Documentation API
  • Ressources de marque
  • Carrières
  • Presse
  • Conditions d'utilisation
  • Politique de confidentialité
EveryEvent
© 2026 EveryEvent Dublin. Tous droits réservés.
Inspiration

Taking Things Personally: HowEgo Creates Conflict

Eckhart Tolle
Eckhart Tolle
Jan 10, 2026
7 min read

TL;DR: Many conflicts arise from the unconscious ego's need to be right, special, or validated—a defensive mechanism that keeps us locked in reactivity. By simply noticing these patterns without judgment, we begin to loosen the ego's grip on our behavior. When we stop defending our identity and seeking external validation, we create space for genuine connection and peace in relationships.

Read · 6 sections

What Does It Mean to Take Things Personally?

Taking things personally occurs when we interpret another person's words, actions, or tone as a reflection of our worth or identity. Someone forgets to call you back, and you feel rejected. A colleague questions your work, and you feel attacked. A partner makes a critical comment, and you hear it as a deeper condemnation of who you are. In each case, what began as a simple external event becomes wrapped in emotional reactivity and self-defense.

This mechanism is rooted in the ego—the constructed sense of self that relies heavily on external validation and the need to maintain a particular image or status. The ego cannot tolerate the feeling of being "wrong," "less than," or invisible. So it instantly mobilizes a defensive response: you become argumentative, withdrawn, angry, or overly explanatory. The conversation shifts from the actual issue to a battle over who is right and who gets to feel validated.

Why Does the Ego Need to Be Right, Special, or Validated?

The ego's core anxiety is one of fundamental inadequacy. Without constant reinforcement from the outside world—approval, recognition, status, agreement—the ego fears it simply does not exist or does not matter. This fear runs so deep that it operates unconsciously in most people, driving behavior without their awareness.

The need to be right serves as a defense against this fear. When you win an argument, prove your point, or get someone to admit you were correct, the ego receives a temporary boost. For a moment, it feels secure, validated, in control. Similarly, the need to be special—to stand out, to be superior, to have unique qualities that separate you from others—provides the ego with a sense of worth. And the need for validation is constant: recognition, praise, likes, agreement, love offered on condition that you meet certain standards.

These three needs overlap and reinforce each other. A critical comment threatens all three at once: it suggests you might be wrong (undermining rightness), ordinary (threatening specialness), and unworthy of approval (attacking validation). The ego reacts with what feels like survival urgency.

How Does the Ego Show Up in Everyday Interactions?

The ego's influence appears in small, repetitive patterns that most people never question because they seem so natural and justified:

  • Defensiveness: Someone makes a suggestion, and you immediately explain why it won't work or why your way is better. Your mind is busy protecting your position rather than genuinely hearing them.
  • Blame and complaint: When something goes wrong, the ego quickly finds an external cause—someone else's incompetence, bad luck, unfair circumstances—to avoid the discomfort of responsibility.
  • Comparison and judgment: The ego constantly measures itself against others. You notice their flaws, their failures, their weaknesses, using these observations to reassure yourself that you are at least better in some way.
  • Seeking agreement: You share your opinions, beliefs, or stories, and you feel a subtle satisfaction when others agree and discomfort when they don't. Their agreement feels like personal validation; their disagreement, like rejection.
  • Resentment over unmet expectations: You do something for someone with an unspoken expectation of gratitude or reciprocation. When they don't respond as expected, you feel hurt and unappreciated—the ego's investment in being "good" or "generous" has gone unpaid.
  • Withdrawal or aggression: When you feel personally attacked or dismissed, you either pull away (creating distance as punishment) or come back harder (justifying your right to defend yourself).

In each of these patterns, the interaction is not actually about solving a problem or connecting with another person. It is about protecting and feeding the ego's sense of self.

Why Does Noticing the Ego Begin to Loosen Its Grip?

The key insight is that the ego operates most powerfully when it remains invisible. As long as you are identified with it—as long as you believe your defensive reaction is simply an appropriate response to what happened—it controls you. You feel justified in your anger, your defensiveness, your resentment. The ego seems not like ego but like truth.

The moment you notice it—"There it is, the ego defending itself, needing to be right"—a subtle shift occurs. A space opens between you and the automatic reaction. You are no longer entirely fused with the pattern. This space is the beginning of freedom.

Noticing does not require belief or effort. It is not about trying to transcend the ego or be spiritual or "better." It is simply seeing: This is what is happening right now. This is the ego's mechanism. When you observe without judgment—without deciding the ego is bad or that you should eliminate it—the observation itself weakens the ego's power. It can no longer compel you to act automatically.

Over time, as you repeatedly notice these patterns, you create a new possibility: you can feel the ego's impulse to defend and choose not to act on it. You can hear criticism without immediately needing to explain or deflect. You can remain present with someone even when they disagree with you. You can do kind things without needing thanks. None of this requires suppressing the ego or fighting it; it requires only awareness.

How Does This Awareness Affect Relationships?

When both people in a relationship are unconsciously identified with their egos, every interaction becomes a subtle (or not-so-subtle) power struggle. One person says something, the other hears a threat, and defensive reactions multiply. Over time, genuine communication becomes nearly impossible. People talk past each other, each protecting their position rather than truly hearing.

When even one person begins to notice their ego patterns, the dynamic shifts. They stop reacting automatically. They remain present. They listen without needing to win. This creates an opening for the other person—permission, in a sense, to also relax their defenses. It does not guarantee the other will take this opening, but it becomes possible in a way it wasn't before.

More fundamentally, when you stop taking things personally, you stop treating the other person as a threat to your identity. You can see them more clearly—their own struggles, fears, and defensive patterns—rather than only seeing how they affect you. This clarity naturally invites a different kind of relating: one based not on mutual ego validation but on genuine presence and understanding.

Where to Go From Here

The practice is simple but requires consistent attention: Notice when you are defending, blaming, comparing, or seeking agreement. Notice when a comment or action triggers a need to protect your image or prove your worth. Do not judge yourself for noticing it. Do not try to change it. Simply see it clearly. Ask yourself: Am I identifying with the ego right now? Am I taking this personally?

Each time you notice without acting on it, you strengthen the awareness that is not the ego—what remains when all defensive reactions fall away. This awareness is your true nature, and it is always more powerful than the ego's fear. As this awareness grows, you will find that fewer and fewer situations feel like personal threats, and more and more interactions become opportunities for genuine connection.

Eckhart Tolle
AuthorEckhart Tolle

German-born spiritual teacher whose 1997 book The Power of Now became one of the most widely read spiritual works of the 21st century. After a profound transformation at 29 — movin…

View profileWebsite
Explore Topics
Ego-defensePersonal-growthRelationshipsConsciousnessConflict-resolution

Got Questions?

Frequently Asked Questions

The ego identifies your personal worth with your beliefs and opinions. When someone disagrees, the ego interprets it as a threat to your identity rather than simply a difference of perspective. Over time, noticing this pattern—that you are taking their disagreement personally—allows you to separate your sense of self from your positions.
Defensiveness is an automatic ego response designed to protect your image of being right, special, or worthy. The first step is simply noticing the impulse to defend without acting on it immediately. This creates a gap between impulse and action, where genuine choice becomes possible. With practice, you can remain present and listen instead of reflexively protecting your position.
Self-respect is grounded in self-awareness and personal values; it does not require external validation or proving yourself to others. Ego, by contrast, is constantly seeking approval, trying to be right, and defending against perceived threats to its status. True self-respect remains steady regardless of others' opinions.
Yes. When you are not identified with the ego's need to win or prove yourself, you can respond to genuine injustice or boundary violations from a place of clarity rather than reactivity. You act because it aligns with your values, not because you feel personally attacked and must defend your identity.
This is not about achieving a permanent state but about deepening your capacity to notice. Each time you catch yourself in a defensive pattern and observe it without judgment, you weaken its grip slightly. The shift is gradual, happening naturally as awareness grows, rather than something you can force.
Noticing and reacting can happen simultaneously—awareness is developing in real time. Even partial awareness counts; you are still creating a gap between the impulse and total identification with it. Over time, the lag shortens and genuine choice increases. This is a natural process of developing presence.
Not exactly. Healthy consideration of others' perspectives can inform your choices and relationships. The issue arises when your sense of worth depends on their approval or when you defend your image automatically without reflection. The teaching points to freedom from *reactive* dependence on external validation, not to indifference.
Real feedback or rejection is easier to receive when you are not identified with the ego's fear of inadequacy. You can listen for useful information without needing to defend your identity. Some criticism may be valid and worth considering; some may reflect the other person's projections. With awareness, you can distinguish between the two.

Continue Reading

More from Eckhart

View All
God Beyond the Sky: Rethinking Divine Nature
Featured

God Beyond the Sky: Rethinking Divine Nature

God is not an external judge deciding human suffering. Suffering itself becomes the mechanism through which consciousness awakens to itself.…

1 min read
God, Suffering, and the One Life Across Traditions
Featured

God, Suffering, and the One Life Across Traditions

Eckhart Tolle explores how Islam, Buddhism, and Greek philosophy all point to the same ultimate reality—and why the problem of suffering dis…

1 min read
Why Humanity Cannot Sit in Silence: Disconnection from Being
Featured

Why Humanity Cannot Sit in Silence: Disconnection from Being

The root of human conflict lies in disconnection from the being dimension—the inability to find peace when alone. When disconnected from bei…

1 min read
Who You Really Are Beyond Surface Identity
Featured

Who You Really Are Beyond Surface Identity

You are not your body, name, or conditioned mind. Eckhart Tolle reveals the distinction between surface identity and deeper being.…

1 min read

Keep exploring

Continue your journey

More wisdom and gatherings from across the BrightStar directory.

More Articles

Browse the full library of teachings, interviews, and guides.

Back to all articles →

Teachers & Artists

Explore the lineages, musicians, and guides of the conscious world.

Explore artists →

Find an Event

Kirtan, retreats, sound baths, breathwork, festivals — happening soon.

Browse events →
Read more from BrightStarCreate Free Account
Host your own gatherings?Try the Demo