The Cost of the Lies We Tell Ourselves
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概要
Keith Lee Johnson digs into the quiet, corrosive power of self‑deception—how it forms, how it hides, and how it shapes the adults we become. He traces the roots of his own relationship with truth back to childhood, where broken promises and unreliable authority taught him to value punctuality, accountability, and personal integrity with almost surgical precision.
The conversation moves through the ways people avoid uncomfortable truths, the trauma that trains us to lie to ourselves, and the emotional toll of pretending not to know what we already know. Johnson argues that growth begins the moment we stop running from our past and start naming it.
From there, he shifts into the discipline of a “made‑up mind”—the idea that success is less about talent and more about the refusal to quit. He uses his own life as proof that education, self-awareness, and relentless perseverance can break generational patterns and set new standards for one’s life.
At its core, the discussion is a challenge: confront your illusions, embrace the truth, and decide—fully and finally—who you intend to become.