TLDR: In this exploration of mystical Christianity, Alan Watts examines what Jesus actually taught about your true identity—moving beyond the small, ego-constructed self to recognize the divine nature that underlies your being. Through the lens of therapy, religion, and direct mystical experience, Watts illustrates how the realization of being God (not in a grandiose sense, but as a fundamental truth about consciousness itself) is central to Jesus's message and to genuine psychological healing.
What Did Jesus Actually Say About Identity?
The Christian tradition often obscures what Jesus taught about the self. Watts points to the radical nature of Jesus's core message: that your true identity is not your ego, your name, your role, or your accumulated personality. Rather, Jesus pointed toward a recognition of fundamental divine nature—a realization that would have been shocking to his listeners precisely because it contradicts how we normally think about ourselves.
When Jesus spoke of being "born again" or entering the Kingdom of Heaven "like a child," he was not advocating for naive regression or emotional sentimentality. Instead, he was pointing to a radical shift in identity recognition—from the constructed self (the "I" that worries, accumulates, defends) to the deeper nature of awareness itself. This realization, Watts suggests, is what Jesus meant when he said things like "Before Abraham was, I am"—a statement that goes beyond personal identity into the recognition of eternal, universal consciousness.
How Does Mystical Experience Relate to Religion?
Watts draws a crucial distinction between religion as an institution and mysticism as direct experience. Religion, in its organized form, often becomes a system of belief, rules, and institutional power that can actually obscure the very realization it claims to preserve. Mysticism, by contrast, is the direct experiential realization of the truth that religion speaks about.
Jesus himself was a mystic—someone who had realized his true nature and pointed others toward that same realization. But the institutional church that followed often turned mysticism into doctrine, transformation into belief, and direct experience into inherited tradition. This is not a criticism of faith itself, but rather an observation about how living wisdom becomes calcified into dogma when institutions take over.
The tension between mystical insight and religious structure is not new. Throughout history, the mystics and direct experiencers have often found themselves at odds with institutional religion, precisely because their direct realizations cannot be contained within doctrinal frameworks or hierarchical authority structures.
What Is the Role of Therapy in Awakening?
Watts explores how modern therapy and ancient spiritual wisdom address similar problems—but often from different angles. Therapy, particularly in its psychological forms, tends to work within the framework of helping the ego become healthier, more integrated, and better functioning. There is real value in this: a person who is neurotic, fragmented, or psychologically damaged benefits tremendously from therapeutic work.
However, therapy alone typically does not address what Watts calls the fundamental issue: the illusion of the separate, isolated self. A person can become a very healthy, well-adjusted ego and still miss the fundamental realization about their true nature. In this sense, therapy might be seen as a necessary but not sufficient condition for spiritual awakening.
Where mysticism enters is in the recognition that the very structure we call "I"—the sense of being a separate observer locked behind the eyes, viewing the world from a distance—is itself the fundamental delusion. This is not something that can be "cured" through better mental health (though better mental health may support the recognition). It requires a shift in identity itself.
What Is the Paradox of Realizing You Are God?
Watts uses a clever therapeutic scenario to illustrate a central paradox: imagine a clinical patient comes to therapy with delusions of grandeur, claiming to be God. The therapist works to help them adjust to reality, to recognize themselves as an ordinary person. But what if the patient's recognition is actually true—not in the grandiose, egoic sense (I am God and you are not), but in the deeper sense (the fundamental consciousness experiencing this moment is the same consciousness that pervades all existence)?
The genius of this scenario is that it reveals how our ordinary consensus reality is itself a kind of shared delusion—not in a dismissive way, but in the recognition that we have all agreed to pretend to be smaller, more separate, more limited than we actually are. We have been hypnotized by language, social conditioning, and the structure of thought itself into believing we are isolated egos in a dead universe, when the direct experience available in meditation and mystical states suggests something quite different.
This is not grandiosity; it is actually the opposite. The realization that "I am God" (properly understood) is a radical humility, because it means recognizing that there is no special "I" that is God—rather, the God that is everything is also what you are, stripped of all pretense and self-importance.
How Does Language Shape Our Sense of Self?
A key insight in Watts's teaching is how language and thought construct our sense of identity. The words we use to describe ourselves—"I am Richard," "I am a therapist," "I am anxious"—all reinforce the sense of being a separate entity with fixed characteristics. We mistake the map (the linguistic description) for the territory (the actual lived experience).
When you examine your actual direct experience without the overlay of language and thought, something shifts. You notice that there is simply awareness happening, sensations arising and passing, thoughts emerging—but where is the fixed "I" that is supposedly having these experiences? The more carefully you look, the more elusive the separate self becomes, and the more apparent it is that consciousness itself is the fundamental reality, not the small self that seemed so real when we were lost in thought.
Jesus's teaching about true identity points in exactly this direction. It is not that you need to gain something new or become something you are not. Rather, it is about seeing through the illusion of separation and recognizing the ground of being that was always already present.
What Is the Relationship Between Individual and Universal Consciousness?
At the heart of Watts's exploration is a question that Jesus also grappled with: if you are truly God, and God is truly all-pervading consciousness, how can there be many individuals? The answer lies in understanding that individuality and universality are not opposites—they are two perspectives on the same reality.
Just as the ocean expresses itself as individual waves, and each wave is both a distinct form and also the ocean itself, consciousness expresses itself through individual human beings. Each person is, from one perspective, a unique expression of the universal. From another perspective, each person is the whole universe experiencing itself from a particular vantage point.
This is not mere poetic metaphor. It is a description of the structure of reality that can be directly verified through contemplative practice. When you settle into deep meditation and the ordinary sense of separation quiets, what remains is not nothingness but a profound sense of aliveness, presence, and interconnection that is simultaneously your deepest self and the ground of all existence.
How Does This Teaching Transform Your Daily Life?
The realization of your true nature is not meant to be a merely intellectual understanding or a pleasant mystical experience that you retreat into. Rather, it gradually transforms how you relate to life itself. When you begin to see through the illusion of the separate self, several things shift:
- Anxiety and fear diminish because they are based on the illusion of isolation. If there is no separate "you" to be threatened, then the fundamental anxiety of existence begins to dissolve.
- Defensiveness softens because there is no precious ego that needs to be protected and promoted. This naturally gives rise to greater ease in relationships.
- Creativity flows more freely because you are no longer trying to prove your worth or construct an identity. You simply express what wants to come through.
- Compassion arises naturally because you recognize the other as not fundamentally separate from yourself. Harming another is recognized as harming yourself.
These are not achievements to be gained through effort. Rather, they are natural consequences of seeing what is actually true about your nature and the nature of reality.
Where to Go From Here
If this exploration resonates, the next step is not to believe it intellectually but to investigate it directly. Meditation practice provides a systematic way to examine your actual experience rather than the stories you tell about it. Through sitting quietly and observing the arising and passing of thoughts, sensations, and emotions, you can begin to glimpse the awareness that is aware of all these things—the consciousness that is the ground of your being.
Reading or listening to teachers like Alan Watts, Jesus (through the Gospels), and other mystics can help point the way, but the realization itself is available only through your own direct investigation. The promise of the mystical tradition is that this recognition is not reserved for special people or distant times—it is available to you, here, now, if you are willing to look beneath the surface of your conditioned identity and discover what is actually true.



