There’s a peculiar modern delusion that people who change their views with age are somehow weak or unprincipled. The opposite is true. I’ve yet to meet a single person who remained identical to their youthful self, and thank God for that. Youth mistakes novelty for wisdom and rebellion for insight.

The arc bends predictably. We start convinced we’ve transcended the accumulated knowledge of centuries, only to discover through hard experience that traditional wisdom wasn’t oppression but pattern recognition across generations.

Life has a way of stripping away the pretense that we’re self sufficient architects of meaning. The things I once dismissed as outdated turned out to be foundations, not prisons. That’s not regression. It’s finally having enough data points to recognize the pattern.

If you’re on a similar journey, you’re not alone. The path back isn’t weakness. It’s wisdom finally catching up to experience. The real question isn’t why people change, but why we ever expected them not to.

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smart people change their minds. 100%

I’ve done a 180 on almost everything I thought I knew when I was a young man.

Maybe there will be humility enough to listen through our own filters, maybe. I found that I love asking question and then listening to my seniors. They have wisdom. Especially the ones steeped in God’s word. The best ones in my experience lead you into it with love. Those tend to be the seniors that I’ve known.

So accurate. Thanks

💯 wisdom is knowledge that withstands the test of time

You cannot remain the same or you have not lived.

Life without transformation and evolution is not fully experienced or a meaningful one, the essential nature of change and personal growth.