In my childhood the world did not make very much sense to me. I asked many silly questions, but would seldom receive any adequate answers or even an honest ‘I don’t know’. This made me feel very inadequate, as though there was some fundamental truth that I was just not getting. Then I thought, alright, they don’t know, but they’re OK about it because they know that there is at least someone who knows. The people in charge must know.
As I grew older and older and met more and more people, it became increasingly clear that no one had a very clear idea of anything and that the proverbial emperor had no clothes on. It took many years for me to fully come to terms with this and rediscover the self-confidence to ask silly questions.
As a child and even as a young man I expected to find such things as perfect wisdom, perfect virtue, or perfect love in the world. But these things simply do not exist in their perfect, absolute, and ideal forms—or, at least, not outside the unique and amazing thing that is the human imagination.
Neel Burton is author of The Art of Failure: The Anti Self-Help Guide and Hide and Seek: The Psychology of Self-Deception
Find Neel Burton on Twitter @NeelBurton