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.

A month after my father’s death, it doesn’t feel real that he’s gone
What do we prove with huge houses we can’t afford to pay for or even fill?
Psychiatrist’s insight might be link between spiritual, material worlds
A reminder to friends of liberty: Others don’t understand our beliefs
Widow: ‘Things that mattered yesterday do not matter today’
Science or bias? What if there’s no proof that eating fat will kill you?
2-day-old baby reminds me that miracles still happen every day
Fetish for privatizing misses point; it’s having a choice that matters
New Star Trek film is reminder that adults aren’t running Hollywood