I spent much of my life trying to correct the rest of the world.
I knew the facts. I knew what was rational. I was absolutely certain of myself. I was arrogant enough to believe I knew what other people ought to believe. How they ought to live. What they ought to say. And I would argue with almost anybody, especially online. All of these idiotic beliefs kept me miserable.
I had to learn a humbling lesson. Nobody wanted me to correct him or her. Even if I was right, my arrogant attitude and insistence on “fixing” others made me wrong. It took me years to learn that.
I see plenty of people around me today who still haven’t learned this lesson — and that is often keeping them unhappy, arrogant and bitter, even if they can’t admit it to themselves.
So I’m going to tell you what I’ve learned. You can accept this lesson or you can ignore it. That’s up to you. Ready?
Let people be wrong.
Don’t argue with them. Don’t try to prove you’re right. Don’t try to prove they’re wrong. You have nothing to gain by arguing. Even if the other person is objectively wrong, so what? Are you really making a difference now if you’re going around correcting people? How’s that working out for you?

What dark magic will it take to get Obama re-elected? Merlin knows
If there are exceptions to free speech, it’s not really free speech, is it?
We won’t be free until politicians lose power to control the Internet
Irrational beliefs hurt all of us when you hand power to the ignorant
Both sides of gun debate see what they want to see in D.C. shooting
We need loving communities so we can know, ‘You’re not alone’
‘Conservative’ GOP governors forget principles when their state involved
Who’s the hero of Chick-fil-A wars? Rachel set an example for all of us
If terrorists ‘hate us for our freedom,’ U.S. politicians are their best allies