Why is it that the seeds of some people’s destruction are found in their greatest strength?
I’ve been wrestling with this question for a long time now. As I’ve gone through a low part of my life for the past four or five years, I was under the impression this had been a very recent thought for me. But last week, I found a note from myself dated April 11, 2008. It simply read, “Seeds of destruction? Why is it that the seeds of some people’s destruction are found in their greatest strength?”
I don’t remember having this thought back then and I have no idea what prompted it, but it struck me strongly enough to write it down. Almost 10 years later, it seems as though I had half of an insight back then — and maybe I finally have the other half of it today.
For most of my life, I’ve been fascinated with personality and how it affects different people’s actions, but I think I’ve had something backward for all these years. In fact, I suspect most of our personality systems have something fundamentally wrong. We focus on our apparent strengths in order to allow us to “outrun this humanity” inside — the messy parts we are so ashamed of.

Tradeoffs about values leave me feeling like ‘double-minded man’
Envy drives hatred for wealthy, but I want to earn my riches
Openly gay people in U.S. military? So what? I have no objections
Doing it for the children? No, they’re doing it for the TV cameras
Too many voices with little to say: Politics matters less and less to me
Don’t believe angry words and deception from a wounded heart
UPDATE: Major changes coming to this website in the next few months