What if you discovered something life-changing — something that could improve life for everyone — but nobody wanted to hear about it?
About 12 years ago, I discovered the germ of an idea that was astounding to me. It hit me out of the blue. It was an epiphany that I didn’t ask for and which I didn’t control. I immediately knew it was true and I knew it was important, but I couldn’t put it into words simple enough to explain it to others.
The idea was so abstract that my heart felt it more than my brain reasoned it. I knew it would change everything — for me and for others — if I could ever fully work it out. But it remains so abstract and so instinctive for me that others look at me blankly when I try to explain.
Ready? Here it is.
You do not want the real-world things you think you want.
And I don’t want the things I think I want, either. Instead, we all want — and need, require, crave, thirst for — an inner state of being which we can’t consciously understand. Our hearts know this instinctively and abstractly, but our brains completely misunderstand — and our conscious reasoning leads us astray.
Please don’t tune out. Not yet.

Fiscal sanity is dead because most people are irrational hypocrites
Let others be wrong if they want; it’s not your job to fix their errors
Are government employee unions making the rest of us unsafe?
I didn’t realize this until tonight, but I have been needing to cry
HUMOR: The senator chooses whether to live in heaven or hell
My programming from childhood still equates blame with shame
Angry reactions to others can make us wrong even when we’re right
Without community, we no longer know each other, in life or death