By the time I was in college, I knew everything. My beliefs about politics and theology and society were firmly fixed. I’d been taught almost everything and I figured out the rest.
Or so I thought.
Eventually, a bit of humility started to erode my arrogance. I finally had to ask myself how I could have been so lucky to have been born into the only culture and country and religious group to have everything figured out correctly.
When I realized how absurd it was to think that could have been true, I was forced to look at what I believed and ask myself why I believed those things.
I went through a lot of deconstruction of what I believed. The process was painful at times. Eventually, I firmly embraced some of what I’d been taught and rejected other parts of it. This was a terrifying process that forced me to be vulnerable to the scary possibility that I had everything wrong.
Years later, I’m nothing like the person I was when I was young. My values are the same, but many of my beliefs have changed. I’ve realized now that a lot of people believe changing your mind is a sign of weakness or failure.
I’ve come to see that the power of change has given me more joy and freedom and confidence than I ever had when I knew everything. And I couldn’t have experienced that without accepting that I’d been wrong.

Only certainty of life is that every one of us crosses River Styx alone
Live in ways that allow you to be the ‘light’ in life of one you love
Time to face facts: Most people don’t really want individual liberty
Goodbye, William (1999-2015)
Grow veggies in your own yard? ‘You’re heading to jail, you criminal’
Chick-fil-A boycott misguided; tolerance has to run both ways
Illusions we project for others allow us to remain hidden inside
I want my children surrounded by tools of creation, not consumption