I have a desperate need to be right — but that doesn’t mean what you probably think it means.
It’s not that I want you to believe I know everything. In fact, I very loudly and clearly confess how little I know. It’s not that I want to convince you that I’m never mistaken about anything. It’s easy for me to confess when I’ve made a mistake. I often go out of my way to explain to someone why I was wrong, even if nobody cares.
It’s simply that I have an incredibly strong sense of what is right and what is wrong — and I am driven by something deep inside me to align with whatever I believe it means to do the right thing. So my desire to “be right” is more of a standard for myself.
If I believe I know the right thing, I am obligated to do that right thing. It doesn’t matter whether anybody else will ever know. It doesn’t matter that there might be no consequences. It only matters that I obey the firm moral compass inside me.
I can look back on my past life and see that this has been the core motivation for my entire life. I must do the right thing, no matter what it costs. I can’t help it.

If you’ve gotten on the wrong bus, nothing changes until you get off
Health risk and social costs make drinking alcohol a very poor risk
Failure to communicate: Angry, bitter people misunderstand each other
On this website’s 10th birthday, I’m planning for the next decade
Could free cities turn reservations from abject poverty to prosperity?
Group conflict isn’t as simple as tales of good guys vs. bad guys
Abortion debate gives us lots of candidates for ‘Idiot of the Year’
Few people want to admit it, but our society rewards conformity