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.

For a culture where God is dead, spiritual emergence is madness
Union rules protect pepper-spraying cop from the firing he deserves
Insanity is part of being human – and we’re all potentially unstable
Media bias: ‘They can state the facts while telling a lie’
Tradeoffs about values leave me feeling like ‘double-minded man’
Don’t trust this con man — or almost anybody else on ‘TV news’
‘Vote iPhone in 2012’: Let’s bring democracy to the phone world