Cheese beats
42 as the answer to the ultimate question - the meaning of life, the universe and everything. (from Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy)
Which incidentally I think had the most highly realised beings in the universe as mice - so maybe there's a reason for cheese Bets..
I wasn't knocking retrieval, only (again) playing with some of the peculiarities which seem to surround this business of ego which affects almost all of us.
As Alysia says it's something that with life experience and personal work seems to eventually fall away.
It's taught using lots of scenarios to describe the process, and as being a bit of a catch 22 issue though. It could be described as the result of your shedding delusion to expose the 'true nature of mind' (Buddhism), or as the result of the Holy Spirit helping you to drop unreal beliefs. (ACIM)
The catch 22 is that if you strive to drop ego then you've turned it into an objective that you are grasping for - which by definition actually strengthens the ego, and risks getting one into acting out all sorts of 'egoless' behaviours for appearances, or to convince oneself.
What's taught is that it's more a matter of the gradual and spontaneous emergence of a reality based view - the result of developing an equanimity that leaves us free to always go with the natural flow of a situation without bias creeping in as a result of ego originated selfishness (which is in turn based on fear).
The process is maybe a bit like the fog slowly clearing to reveal a beautiful vista.
Please pardon my off topic banging on about ego, but it's usually seen as th central issue on the path, and seen this way could be described as being the underlying issue in respect of all the issues arising around spirituality - misuse, exploitative teachers, wannabee students, beliefs and behaviours that block and/or cause suffering and so on...