While few would argue that a full life can be achieved without being true to oneself, the simple truth of the matter is that the people around us generally don't like it when our behavior fails to match their preconceived ideas about who we are. They react poorly to change and they will typically fight very hard to convince you that their notion of who you are is more valid than the idea of self you are now expressing. Although these attempts may not be overt, and they may take many forms - the end result is "a lot of bad noise" and a strong societal encouragement to re-take up our assigned role. This in turn causes negative stimuli and when combined with our natural desire to be loved and accepted, turns into a self perpetuating cycle of adaptive behavior and deeply rooted self-deceptions.
Perhaps the saddest aspect of this whole bloody, great mess however is that the "truth" society and the people around us seek to enforce is actually the "lie" that binds so many of us to suffering. The ideas, feelings, desires, expressions and attitudes that reside deep inside of us are *FAR* more representative of who we are and more importantly who we COULD be than the seemingly omnipresent force of societal pressure could ever hope to be. The things that go on inside of our heads come from a *real* place of infinite potential; while most of the forces that pressure us into conformity merely represent a pattern or idea of what life ought to be like - usually cooked up by some octogenarian official from a long forgotten generation before us.
The question then becomes how to escape the trap and while I cannot profess to know all things for all people, I know that in my life any modicum of true happiness I've obtained has come from fighting for who I am and what I believe in. In order to be accepted for who you are in a world that encourages you to be anything but, it becomes necessarily to shout your ideas, opinions and feelings from the rooftops to be heard. You must constantly define and redefine your ideas, attitudes and self-image for those around you - so that they do not for one moment feel any temptation to define these things for you. Furthermore, this will not be frictionless - you must be prepared to lose false friends, to separate from family members and to be ostracized from certain social circles. You will step into the ring a proud champion of your own personhood over and over; you will leave the contest bloody every single time. There will be pain, there will be loss, there will be suffering. You must accept that this is the price of defining who you are and you must always remember that although you are bruised and battered emotionally - you have not been broken.
I don't know if there's anyone out there reading this, and if you are reading it - I can't pretend to have a clue who you are. What I can say is that if who you are isn't who you want to be, maybe it's time to revisit the question of who you are in the first place? There's no such thing as a second chance because that presupposes the world was prepared to give you a first chance anyways. You must fight... and little grasshopper: you must win.
- Henry David Thoreau



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