“It’s hard to know the truth about people by how they look or even what they say, but you can discover a good deal by rummaging through their belongings.”– Michael Masterson

Honesty, Honestly 

Ralph, a protégé of mine, once told me that he was taking a class in “radical” honesty to help him communicate with his son. One exercise that the instructor recommended was for them stand face-to-face, naked, and talk about their “issues.” He was eager to try it.

“Good luck with that,” I thought….

Hugo, a friend of mine, was in a bind. He had been offered a good job working for Leopold, another friend of mine. He intended to take the job, but had done some research and discovered that Leopold had a reputation for being difficult. He asked me if I thought he had a moral obligation to tell Leopold what was being said about him.

“Bad idea,” I said. “Leopold is a smart man, and I’m sure that he is aware of his reputation. He’s interested in you as an employee, not as a personal consultant.”

“I think I’m going to do it anyway,” Hugo said.

And you can imagine how that went….

The day after their marriage counseling appointment, Suzanne says to David, “You are an idiot.”

“We’re not supposed to speak like that to one another, “ David reminds her. “Just express your feelings, like Dr. Berns said. “Just speak honestly about how you feel.”

“You’re right,” Suzanne says. “I’m sorry. I feel like you’re an idiot.”

Six months later, they were divorced….

A digital marketing guru republishes a blog post he wrote that “got more responses than any other email I’ve ever written.”

It’s about a phone conversation he had with his mother when he was in college. He was working from his apartment doing affiliate marketing. She was “nagging” him “non-stop” to get a “real job.” The conversation got tense. She accused him of “scamming people on the internet for money.” He felt like “a knife had been twisted in [his] back.”

“Fuck you! Don’t fucking talk to me!” he yelled.” And then he hung up. “I was trying so hard to make it. And my mother was just shitting all over me.”

He says he still has anger for her, but he’s “come to realize that’s just who she is.”

His truth….

Honesty is a false god. It is not a virtue. It is at best the illusion of virtue. Most of the time, honesty is inwardly focused and self-indulgent. It is an escape hatch that allows us to sneak away from our deeper moral responsibilities.

Most people know this in their bones. But because there is so much philosophical pollution in our thinking today, it is seldom if ever acknowledged.

There is something more trustworthy than honesty, and that is truth. Not my truth or your truth, but the truth. A truth that is verifiable. A truth that is universal. A truth that is incontrovertible.

Telling the truth takes courage. Telling your truth – i.e., being honest about your half-baked thoughts and feelings – takes no courage at all.

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“Energy Paradoxes Put Europe in a Precarious Position” from Townhall.com

An interesting perspective on European attitudes towards global politics and global warming. LINK

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An email from KM:

Thank you Mark. For what? For being an example…. I just found out today that Michael Masterson was you. Imagine that. All this time and I didn’t know…. Anyway. Just thank you and I’m happy I found your blog.

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“An idea, like a ghost, must be spoken to a little before it will explain itself.” – Charles Dickens

I began writing an essay this morning tentatively titled “Early Warning Signs You’re Writing a Bad Essay.” Then this afternoon, I came across an essay I had saved by Jessica Wildfire on basically the same subject. (Jessica is a smart and funny contributor to Medium.com whom I follow.)

“Even geniuses have terrible ideas,” she says in the essay. “They’re just good at spotting them. They know what a good ideal feels like…. I’m coming off fresh from a stupid idea, with firsthand knowledge of what it feels like from start to finish.”

She then lists the following:

“10 Signs You’ve Got a Stupid Idea” by Jessica Wildfire 

  1. You feel like it’s utterly brilliant 

“The idea feels like a masterpiece waiting to happen. You haven’t even started working on it, and yet you just know somehow.”

  1. You’re obsessed with its originality 

“Nobody has ever thought of this before, right? You’ll be the first. In truth, nobody’s ever the first to come up with an idea. Not anymore. Humans have lived too long. Every idea just adds a little something.”

  1. You focus on the bells and whistles 

“The idea should be enough. It doesn’t need special features or gimmicks.”

  1. You can’t wait to show it to someone 

“That’s because you feel insecure about your brilliant idea, and you want external validation right away.”

  1. It forms out of desperation 

“You’re probably deep in the swamp of failure. You’re not feeling great about yourself. You’re looking for any reason to feel better. This means you’re more likely to overestimate the quality of your ideas.”

  1. You feel an urge to get it done now 

“Part of you sees what’s going on, and it tries to get you to slow down and think. Your better self doesn’t want you throwing away ten hours on an idea with no merit. Ironically, this puts the rest of your brain into overdrive.”

  1. It’s completely unfeasible 

“That’s the part that tantalizes you. It looks really hard, perhaps even impossible, and right now you want the distraction of a challenge.”

  1. You care more about the idea than anything 

“The best ideas add value to other people’s lives. When you skip over this part, that’s a red hot sign that you should stop and relax.”

  1. You start fearing that it will fail 

“A good idea will get better through criticism. A stupid idea completely falls apart.”

  1. It’s actually torturing you 

“A good idea should feel good…. You should be approaching it with a calm, patient attitude. It’s hard, but the good kind of hard – not the kind that makes you agitated, swinging back and forth between euphoria and panic attacks.”

To Jessica’s observations, I might add… well, frankly, I can’t think of anything else.

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animadversion (noun) 

Animadversion (an-uh-mad-VER-zhun) is an unfavorable or critical remark. Example from Pencil Sketches by Eliza Leslie: “Albina soon perceived herself to be an object of remark and animadversion, and she was sadly at a loss to divine the cause.”

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Asians represent about 5% of public high school students, but constitute 22.9% of Harvard’s freshman class. If admission to Harvard were based solely on academic performance, it would be 43%.

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Bad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup by John Carreyrou

The story of the now well-known Silicon Valley scam. Written by the Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist who broke the story and pursued it till the end, the book is a page-turner and an inside look at the sort of moral depravity that exists in all industries but is sort of protected and even incubated in the high-tech world these days – the world where wealth is created not by creating profits that stem from selling desired products and services, but by creating stories about future profits that are sold to the media and to investors.

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