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Toooldsadly
f9358d37bc8386ddc8c177a322a5f1bef98045ede811505256ce80a2ae66b689
Replying to Avatar HODL

You might be lying more than is healthy for you.

Most people think lying is harmless, just social grease or a shortcut through conflict.

I used to think that too.

But the real damage caused by lying isn’t moral. It’s structural. It’s what it does to your internal model of reality.

To be a convincing liar you have to believe your own stories. And the moment you start believing them, you compromise the part of your mind that knows what’s real. That internal compass, the one that helps you navigate the world and navigate yourself, begins to distort. Hannah Arendt warned that when lies replace truth, our ability to orient ourselves collapses. That’s the real danger.

Lying feels like control, but over time it becomes the opposite. You create a false world, and then that false world starts controlling you.

If you’ve been lying long enough, you’ve already split yourself in two: the part of you that knows the truth and the part of you performing the lie. Carl Jung would say the performer becomes a shadow self you start living inside. And if you inhabit that character long enough, you confuse their desires for your own. Eventually the performance becomes the identity, and your entire life bends around maintaining it.

The prescription is simple, but brutal. Tell the truth again.

But be warned. Truth is expensive. David Foster Wallace said the truth will set you free, but not until it is finished with you.

Telling the truth means killing the false self, and that death is painful because you’ve been identifying with that character for years. You’ve invested in them. You’ve protected them. You’ve let them run your life.

Worse, many of your relationships have bonded not with you, but with the liar, with the persona. And when you kill that persona, people will grieve it. Some will resent you. Some will leave. Some will tell you you’re not yourself anymore without realizing they never actually knew you in the first place.

People love the lie. It’s easier to love. Cleaner. More convenient.

When you start telling the truth, don’t expect applause. Expect resistance. Expect disappointment. Expect people to prefer the mask you wore over the face you’re finally revealing.

But if you stay the course, something else happens.

The world becomes solid again.

Your mind aligns with reality.

Your inner compass recalibrates.

And you stop living as a character in a story you never meant to write.

You come back to yourself.

👍 Be true to everyone*, including yourself.

It works wonders!

* Not government.

Go solo. You never know your luck. On top of that and imo much more important is its decentralisation effect. If big miners shut up shop it won’t matter as enough small ones will still secure the network. It makes your and everyone else’s stash more “anti-fragile”.

“That spirit of freedom stands in sharp contrast to any top-down attempt to impose it on an entire population”

A fair article except, I believe, the above statement. I fully agree with its sentiment but don’t agree that it’s true. I think the word “ impose” goes too far.

As far as I was aware the plan was that no one ever had to either use or accept Btc. The Chivo wallet was meant to convert, or not depending on the users preference.

I have a feeling he fell foul of the common problem of software developers exaggerated claims of what they could deliver.

And I think his “spirit of freedom” led him to run before the whole space could walk properly.