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The question “Who am I?” known to those who engage in spiritual practices as the most important question on which the main search for truth is directed. This question is also important from an everyday point of view, for example, profession, height, weight, religious views and much more. Knowing yourself is important not only because that you need to choose the right path in life, but also just buy yourself clothes - you need to know what parameters to focus on, and what places to go in these clothes. It would seem obvious things, but in practice it turns out that people have ideas about themselves, about whom they don’t even realize. Or, on the contrary, they appear in life in some status, but do not have a conscious identity with this status. For example, a woman has brothers, and accordingly is their sister. But she does not define her role as a sister in any way for herself, because due to various circumstances she does not communicate with her relatives. And here’s another example for those who, for example, are the second great-nephew of a dear old lady living thousands of kilometers away, may also not be aware of their social status, but it exists, according to the family tree. Passing the Kuhn and McCartland test gives amazing discoveries about yourself .When we say “I”, we usually have a certain image in our heads that is difficult to put into words, it is so complex, multi-component, it seems to be about everything at once, but there are no specifics. Specifics appear when a person says “I am a woman” , mother, daughter, ex-wife, real wife, teacher, biker, knitting socks, practicing Kama Sutra.” And here the image begins to emerge, and sometimes it strikes the person taking this test. After all, a person can find his identity in both small and large, spiritual and material, past and future, interests and responsibilities, and much more in there’s so much more to be counted. Each person complements the picture of the world with his or her identity. We can say that this process is endless. And perhaps it meets the needs of seekers and researchers of the surrounding world - a person experiences the world, reflecting it through himself, through his identity.