One thing I’ve noticed is that most people believe they want honesty.
They’ll say they value it. They’ll ask for it. They’ll demand it from other people.
But the real test isn’t how we respond to truth that confirms what we already believe.
The real test is how we respond when the truth challenges it.
Because the truth feels good when it validates us.
It feels good when it supports our opinions, decisions, beliefs, and versions of events.
But the moment it threatens something we’re emotionally attached to, everything changes.
And that’s where things get interesting.
Because attachment has a way of distorting objectivity.
Suddenly, the information isn’t being evaluated based on whether it’s true.
It’s being evaluated based on whether we like what it means.
Whether it supports the outcome we want.
Whether it protects the version of reality we’ve become invested in.
That’s why two people can look at the same facts and walk away with completely different conclusions.
One is trying to understand what’s true.
The other is trying to defend what they already believe.
And if we’re being honest, most people have been both of those people at different points in their lives.
That’s the part that isn’t talked about enough.
The biggest obstacle to truth usually isn’t dishonesty.
It’s attachment.
Attachment to being right. Attachment to a particular outcome.
Attachment to a specific person, a belief, or to an identity.
Once we’re emotionally invested in a conclusion, objectivity often becomes the first thing we sacrifice.
And that’s why truth is so much harder to find than people think.
Not because it’s hidden.
Because we’re constantly tempted to choose what feels good over what’s actually there.
The truth isn’t tested when it agrees with you.
The truth is tested when it costs you something to accept it.
x SAII