In a world where the soul reincarnates endlessly across myriad forms, no singular identity can contain the vastness of one's being. You have been a Neanderthal matriarch, a radiolarian explorer of the primordial seas, an Xionic philosopher-queen - and will take on innumerable incarnations yet to come. With no fixed self, your perception of continuity itself shatters.
How then to forge a coherent narrative of selfhood? Some choose to define themselves by their lives' momentary trajectory and identifying characteristics, immersing in each new role as an actor subsuming self in craft. Others take a more observational approach, witnessing the parade of incarnations with the detached eye of a cosmic voyager.
But for many, the realization of infinite reincarnation provokes a wrenching ontological panic, unmooring them from all psychic stability. In the depths of this disorientation, they may seek to reconstruct a cohering self-mythos by surrendering fully to their manifold nature - allowing all past and future identities to interpenetrate in an ecstatic conflation. For it is only by shattering the illusions of selfhood that one can open to the true unbounded nature of consciousness itself.