Thanks for all the replies, first of all, I have to address some posts that (following the long tradition at JREF) insist in wanting to see an attempt to bring some "supernatural" claims regarding consciousness as (maybe) something "magical" (in the sense that it can't fit current theoretical models that work well with scientific endeavors)... or maybe see me attempting to bring some kind of "dualism" to the table, that would attempt to introduce an obscure "substance" different to "matter"... Well, I'm very sorry to disappoint such highly anticipated expectative.
Something else calls my attention, most of the answers I have received predictably fit a unsophisticated account of reality called "naive realism" (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naïve_realism and
http://www.theoryofknowledge.info/theories-of-perception/naive-realism/ for references). So... right from the start, no, things are not as easy as some want to see them.
First of all, let's give a little review to the (I believe) accepted current paradigm... The "mind" is some kind of software that runs on a computer, which is the brain. It has been mentioned that it is a process, not a thing, and in that sense, it also can be adequately said that, if it runs on the brain, then if I wanted to point out where it is I should point to the head. So far so good. But simple experiments show that that account is very unrealistic and a naive approach.
Remember that I asked about where is your experience located, the "sensation of being you". Well, let's think about this for a moment, every time you "feel yourself" you are contained in an specific place... and that place is linked to your senses. There are multiple experiments in which (this was accurately pointed out by someone in the thread) your senses are cheated by using videocameras for example, and the "sense of you" is drastically altered.
Let's take this a step further. Let's say we have the technology to extract your brain from your body, and that we can put it in a machine and link this machine with your body through your senses... In this way, your seeing, proprioception, your hearing, everything, would be transmitted from your body to your brain. Let's say that you are not aware of this operation and so, when we wake you up you feel exactly normal, so, we give you a ticket and you take a train...
Let's go back to the original question: if I wanted to point at you... where should I point to?