Just as trying to fit into a mold limits you, dedicating your life to being the opposite of what people expect can also prevent you from discovering your true self. Both fitting in and the rebuttal to it cause you to lose yourself.
The foundation of belonging is not being part of a group, but having the courage to belong to yourself above all else. This self-acceptance allows you to belong everywhere because you never betray your own values to fit in.
People will label you based on how they encounter you (e.g., "pastor," "engineer"). Accepting this single label as your full identity is a form of self-imprisonment. To realize your full potential, you must resist being defined by a single role and explore the multiple gifts and talents you possess.
Personal growth and finding your 'true self' is not about adding new skills or beliefs. It's a subtractive process of unlayering and 'unseducing' yourself from the toxic, false narratives imposed by culture. Liberation comes from letting go of these tethers, not from accumulating more.
From a young age, we learn to suppress authentic behaviors to gain acceptance from caregivers, a subconscious survival mechanism. This creates a lifelong pattern of choosing acceptance over authenticity, which must be consciously unlearned in adulthood to reconnect with our true selves.
The ultimate aim is not to achieve conventional success, but to fully express your unique self. This lifelong project is paradoxical: you cannot become unique by yourself. You need others—friends, family, customers—to reflect your authentic self back to you, helping you see who you are.
Society instinctively criticizes people who defy their established labels, like a CEO who DJs or a celebrity passionate about prison reform. True freedom requires the 'courage to be disliked'—the willingness to pursue authentic interests even if they seem inconsistent or confusing to others.
True belonging requires you to be who you are. In contrast, fitting in involves assessing a group and changing your identity to be accepted, an unsustainable act of self-betrayal.
David Choe posits that becoming an expert in disappointing your parents is a prerequisite for living an authentic life. Had he followed their prescribed path, he would have been a lawyer, not a world-renowned artist. This act of rebellion, while painful, is a necessary step to break from inherited values and define one's own.
One of the biggest obstacles to personal growth is that the people around you have a fixed mental model of who you are. When you change, you destabilize their reality, and they will unconsciously try to nudge you back into your familiar role. This social pressure makes reinvention feel like breaking out of an invisible prison.
To evolve, you must engage with ideas outside your comfort zone. This exposure can broaden your perspective so much that you no longer fit in with your original group. While this "losing your citizenship" is daunting, it's a necessary cost for achieving a richer human experience and avoiding stagnation.