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Deconstruction: Religious Deconstruction and the Borrowed Self

Deconstruction: Religious Deconstruction and the Borrowed Self

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The Architecture of the Borrowed Self From childhood, individuals are born into a pre-organized world governed by spoken and unspoken norms. People construct a "borrowed" or "collective" identity based on these external expectations, such as family dynamics, cultural rules, and religious dogmas, long before they develop true personal agency. Because this socialization happens so early, these external agreements become an internal psychological structure, leading individuals to mistake their cultural conditioning for their actual personality.

This borrowed self functions largely as a social performance designed to secure belonging and approval. Maintaining this fabricated identity requires continuous emotional labor, forcing the individual to suppress their authentic inner world to preserve the comfort and harmony of the collective. When operating from the borrowed self, an individual's decisions are driven by the need for external validation, permission, and "borrowed morality", following rules to avoid punishment or secure social acceptance rather than acting from genuine ethical resonance.

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