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.

I don’t allow comments anymore, and I’d like to briefly explain why
These aren’t revolutionaries; they’re nothing but thugs and looters
When you compromise principles, you soon won’t recognize yourself
Media and mass hysteria lead us into madness of celebrity worship
Nobody can ever be good enough when perfection is the standard
We often value a love only after we’ve carelessly thrown it away
State-based ‘aid culture’ makes people believe they’re entitled to other people’s money
After chimp’s mother died, mama dog raised baby as one of her pups