CHIM seems to create a Paradox; at a glance from ground-level the majority of the population seem to be individuals who are their own self, but of course viewed in the grand scheme they are aspects of the same entity, the godhead's construct. Achieving CHIM is supposed to be being able to properly comprehend your own duality as both an individual but also that the multiverse is also an extension of you (This whole thing reeks of Mysticism - I always knew there was a reason it was my favourite school of magic conceptually ).
Anyway, taking into account that everyone and everything is aspects of the same singular "thing", where does that leave traditional concepts of morality once the CHIM-achiever knows the nature of life. Basiclly I'm trying to figure out if the CHIM-achiever is capable of good or evil; whether his or her actions upon the world amount to anything more than a child playing make-believe-tea-party with their teddy bears/smashing up their toy soldiers; and whether the achiever could use their powers to genuinely help or hinder the lives of the individuals within it in any meaningful way. If the individual is nothing more than an extension of the achiever does their life have any more value than that of the life of a *cough* NPC in a game of Oblivion?
Are the individuals even in possession of true individuality truly self aware anyway, if they were there's no restriction to how many people could achieve CHIM at the same time, save for the fact it makes little sense a singular entity could possess two minds.
(Bleh, that took ages to write just a couple simple paragraphs xD - Roll on postlinguistic communication and thought)