I’ve spent my entire life at war with myself. It’s exhausting.
This isn’t a conflict most people recognize. I don’t blame them, though, because I lived with the conflict for decades without understanding this war within. My nature pushed me in one direction, but my childhood programming pushed me in another. Instead of choosing between them, I tried to have one foot on each side.
I wanted to be perfect. I tried to be competent, logical, driven, faultless, charming and well-adjusted. But something inside pushed me to be creative, brilliant, mercurial, iconoclastic and eccentric. I didn’t understand the natural tradeoffs of life.
When I was growing up, my father told me I was just like him. For a long time, I believed him. I tried to emulate him. Through constant self-discipline, I played the role he dictated for me. I loathed the part of myself that was more like my mother. I suppressed it. I denied it. I ignored it.
But I’ll never be what he wanted me to be. I know how to act that role. I can fake it. But on the inside, I’m the eccentric creative type struggling to get past the conventional mask I wear for the world.

Every addiction is heart’s effort to fill inner hole that requires love
When the state turns you into a criminal, friends become enemies
In the great new culture war over Thanksgiving shopping, I’m neutral
If you’re waiting to be rescued, what are you still waiting for?
Film’s tortured protagonist feels uncomfortably familiar to me
Tribal instincts cause us to see others as evil, when they’re just different
Giving up politics left me flat broke; it’s time to earn some money again
Fetish for privatizing misses point; it’s having a choice that matters