Avoid Extremely Intense Ideology
Be careful what you let capture your mind.
Ideology—especially the intense kind—can feel like clarity, like certainty, like purpose. But more often, it’s a trap dressed up as truth. It simplifies the world into clean categories and gives you the thrill of belonging. But the more you chant its slogans, the more it rewires your thinking—until what once felt like freedom starts to look a lot like mental rigidity.
When we adopt an identity based on an ideology—political, religious, social—it can subtly start to think for us. We stop questioning. We start echoing. And every time we shout its dogmas louder, we’re not just expressing belief—we’re pounding those beliefs deeper into our own minds, reducing our capacity to reason and reflect.
Crowds make it worse. Alone, people can think. But in crowds, they tend to abandon thought for emotion—fueled by fear, anger, belonging, spectacle. Reason disappears. Myths spread. Misinformation thrives. The loudest voices win, and the wildest ideas go unchallenged until reality finally catches up to them.
And often, the people most prone to clinging to an ideology are the ones least at peace in themselves. When someone feels empty, unworthy, or insecure, they’re more likely to cling to something bigger than themselves—a flag, a cause, a righteous crusade. It gives them the illusion of meaning. But often, it's just a way to avoid confronting their own life.
So how do you stay clear? Practice the iron rule of intellectual honesty: you are not entitled to an opinion unless you can state the best version of the opposing view better than its supporters can. Until then, you are still learning.
Beware the comfort of extreme beliefs. Think slowly. Stay skeptical—even of your own convictions. And when everyone around you seems absolutely certain… that’s when it’s most important to ask questions.
Because clarity without humility is just dogma in disguise.