The eight everyday preoccupations are eight ways we occupy our minds in order to avoid experiencing things directly • they act as a kind of a central filtering mechanism, separating out the things that feed our ego from the things that challenge it • because of this filtering mechanism, we get jerked around into a very reactive way of living and thinking • all of our thoughts and actions curve inwardly to a kind of self-centered preoccupation: what’s in it for me? how does it affect me? • the eight preoccupations are divided into four pairs: pleasure/pain; fame/insignificance; gain/loss; and praise/blame • for example, why do we feel so lifted up and inspired when we are praised, but we feel so insulted and deflated when we are blamed? • the ego is a bit of a paper tiger: it presents itself as very strong and fierce, but in reality it is very vulnerable and weak • without the constant reinforcement of pleasure, gain, fame, and recognition, the ego just deflates and collapses • when the experiences that come to us—good and bad, up and down—are not recruited as tools to cover our anxiety, we can deal with them straightforwardly, with no agenda.