When we speak, we use the pronoun "I" in two different ways: One refers to the human personality; the other "I," which is the I AM, refers to the God of us, the true "I" of us. Once we acknowledge the true "I" of ourselves, then we can work with truths such as these:
The I of me is light. Therefore I choose to identify with the light, and I choose to radiate light where now there is darkness.
In the midst of pain, the I of me persists. Then the pain is transformed or left behind.
The I of me is greater than any pain. The I of me will not pass away, but the pain will.
The I of me is the witness of all my experiences.
The I of me knows nothing of fear, even while it observes the shadows of life.
The I of me perceives the truth about death, that death is the great illusion of separateness from what I perceive myself to be.
We take refuge in the Spirit of the Most High by dwelling on the attributes of the I of me.
May I draw near to thee, O thou I of me, in everyone I meet.