My life has been a lot less stressful since I found the humility to admit that I’m often a fool.
There was a time when I was afraid of what other people might think. I wouldn’t have put it that way, but if you look at the way I acted, it’s pretty clear. What if people didn’t recognize how smart I am? What if people saw me change my mind about something and realized that I’d been wrong before?
I wanted people to believe I was completely consistent. If I had once said something, I felt obligated to defend it, because admitting I’d been wrong might imply I could still be wrong about other things.
So I pretended I had things figured out, even when I felt foolish inside.

Pro-free market candidates don’t promise price targets on gasoline
Need for certainty is an internal tyranny that leads to the wrong path
Past feels like blurry watercolor, not like the history of real people
Live in ways that allow you to be the ‘light’ in life of one you love
Here’s a hot news flash: State ‘industrial policy’ still doesn’t work
Love & Hope — Episode 7:
We forget how to be happy, but children and animals remember
My bad teen poetry suggests I’ve always hungered for missing love
If you’ve gotten on the wrong bus, nothing changes until you get off