I can tell you how to fix yourself. I can even tell you what’s wrong with the world around us. But please don’t ask me to fix myself.
We’re all held prisoner by something. I didn’t understand this for most of my life. I was blind to the chains that have held me — and most people are blind to whatever is holding them prisoner, too.
Most of us aren’t held behind bars. It’s not iron locks or chains that hold us. We’re held captive by invisible things in our minds and hearts. False beliefs. Self-limitations. Fears. Confusion about what we really need in life. And we’re mostly blind to those limitations. We see how other people are held back. We notice how our friends self-destruct. We even think we understand how the world needs to change.
But most of us are blind to all the ways in which we’re locked up tight in chains of our own. And even though some of us finally see our chains — and know we need to change — it’s easier to try to fix others. Or change the world.
So we hide our problems as well as we can — even from ourselves — and we lecture others about how they ought to fix themselves. I‘m really good at that.

How can a child process seeing his mother trying to stab father?
A question I’m scared to answer: Why haven’t I made another film?
If romantic love is mental illness, do many of us want to be cured?
I’m horrified that it’s become so difficult for me to finish a book
For some of us, loss of trust is a deep existential threat to heart
My father’s embezzling started and ended my media company
I lost my way that night — and it seems I never found my way back
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In ’98, Ron Paul warned U.S. policy was leading to terrorist attacks