How can a hyperactive Ego stop you from bold action?
Sep 01, 2025 5:01 pm
#421 – How can a hyperactive Ego stop you from bold action?
Richard Dawkins’s selfish gene theory (1976) says your genes don’t really care about you. They care about staying alive through you. You’re just their vehicle.
Your genes push you to protect human life (especially if there's a chance you share some genes with these humans)—even if it costs you personally.
Your Ego pushes you to protect yourself—even if it means ignoring a bigger cause.
In balance, that tension makes sense: genes ensure continuity; your Ego ensures your safety.
But when your Ego goes hyperactive (which is always, unless you tame it), bold action dies. You hesitate, stay quiet, or choose comfort over truth.
As Nassim Taleb writes:
Courage is when you sacrifice your own well-being for the sake of the survival of a truth, an idea, or other people.
I saw this play out in my own family. My son confronted a doctor he believed was mistreating patients. He wasn’t seeking wealth, success, or self-interest. He was trying to protect others.
The cost was heavy—10 months in jail—but in that moment he bypassed his Ego’s fear. He acted from courage, not self-preservation.
What courageous step might you take if your hyperactive Ego didn’t hold you back?
Love,
Carolina