Most people are afraid to turn around when they’ve made a choice they’ve determined to be wrong. If they turn the wrong way down a road — confidently declaring it to be the way to go — they persist with the error long after it’s obvious.
We humans hate admitting we’re wrong.
We trap ourselves with our desire to be consistent, even if we don’t consciously know what we’re doing. Most of us are terrified of being seen as contradictory, so we’re afraid to reverse course and say, “I know I said X, but I was wrong and I’ve realized Y is the truth.”
Most people keep themselves locked into X long after they’ve realized Y is true, because they’re too weak to admit to having been wrong and forthrightly turn around. This is what Ralph Waldo Emerson meant in a widely misunderstood passage in his 1841 essay on “Self-Reliance.”

I wasn’t allowed to express need, so I’ve spent life traveling alone
Emotions such as fear, anger cause distraction, make focus difficult
To see how I’ve changed over time, notice which women I’ve fallen for
Why keep playing a game that’s impossible for you to win?
Once the dream of millions, is U.S. citizenship becoming a burden?
Just underneath a civilized veneer, savage conqueror lives in my DNA
To fall in love is to play with fire, but our deep need justifies risks
I’m paralyzed by fear my choices won’t match needs of future wife
Here’s proof (if you need more) that people want something for nothing