 A lot of you know the movie Groundhog Day, where Phil, the weatherman, repeats the same day over and over and over. How many of you have actually had that experience where you feel like you're in the Groundhog Day movie? You know, the alarms going off, you're brushing your teeth, you're going around, they're okay, there we see some hands coming up. Lots of hands. Lots of hands. Now, Groundhog Day is a good example of being under ego control, because it's like you're in the loop and you just keep looping over and over and over again and instead of just waking up every day and as soon as your eyes open, you're in the role and you just go through all these roles every day, go to sleep at night and then repetitively play the same roles over and over and over, there has to be a way for us to begin to loosen from those roles. To get to the point where you actually start pondering, what exactly am I repeating these things for? Is there a point to all this repetition? Is there a point to going through these things over and over? Is it that my mind is so conditioned that I don't even question the repetition anymore or have I just given myself completely over and then you start to feel bored or you start to feel your life is mundane or you need more excitement, you need some spice to come in there because the repetition is so thick, it's just so thick. Even though you seem to have a bit of control over it, it's like manageable fear. The ego doesn't want you to question the whole belief in fear because the ego will be out of business if you do that but it wants you to have a manageable amount of fear where you aren't going to let go of the ego entirely but you're going to learn how to tolerate it or tolerate the human condition and tolerate these repetitious days that just go on and on day after day after day and it wants you to tolerate that instead of actually reaching a point where you say, no this is, I'm worth more than this, I'm worth much more than this.