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.

X-ray scanners used by TSA banned in Europe over health concerns
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Nobody can ever be good enough when perfection is the standard
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Time and attention are flawless guides to what a person values
Christmas marks God’s attempt to connect us to himself and others
‘I know who you are,’ she said. ‘Do you know who you really are?’
Home is just a dream that some among us are still searching for