Mel Schwartz, LCSW

Why Is it so Important to Be Right?

One of the most prevalent – and damaging – themes in our culture is the need to be right. It’s one of those essential memes that we take for granted. It is so deeply embedded in our belief system and in our collective psyche that we never even pause to consider it. It would really serve us to inquire why it is so compelling. Before we begin to look at that, let’s just reflect on how it impacts our lives.

From the more personal and mundane battle over who said what in the midst of an argument to the larger issues of politics, religion, abortion, health care, gun control or climate change, being right is mandated. It quickens our pulse, causes us to shout and can sever relationships. It is the raison d’etre for most acts of hatred, violence and warfare.

Our educational system is rooted in the construct of right and wrong. We are rewarded for what are deemed to be correct answers and the ensuing higher grades, which generally lead to more successful lives. Being right affirms and inflates our sense of self-worth. As students we learn to avoid as best we can the embarrassment of being wrong. Getting the right answer becomes the primary purpose of our education. Isn’t it regrettable that this may be inconsistent with actually learning?

Can you imagine the generative and exciting learning environment that would result from a class that rewarded asking the best questions?  If you think about it, the most intriguing questions are those that don’t offer simple answers. Even more, they drive our thinking into greater complexity and curiosity. This would be a most wonderful learning experience. No one need be cautious about a wrong answer. And everyone would be invited to safely participate in a generative and shared inquiry. Children certainly wouldn’t nod off in boredom.

This experience would look much different that the rote memorizing and spewing back of information – rooted in right or wrong answers. Raising your hand to gain the reward of getting the correct answer is pointless. It doesn’t teach you anything; you already knew the answer. It simply massages your ego, but it doesn’t inspire a genuine learning experience.

Talking Heads

Cable news shows stage the predictable impasse, particularly in the political arena, fervently pitching the argument around right and wrong. What is more stultifying than watching two talking heads assert and then refute each other? A mindless ping-pong match. No one walks away any more enlightened than the way they came in – both pundits and audience.

Have you ever heard a Republican pause and reflect back to a Democrat that they appreciated their point and were reconsidering their point of view? Or a Democrat acknowledge to a Republican that their own opinion wasn’t substantiated by fact as much as belief? It would be an extraordinary moment to witness any break through in this stalemate.

Would you rather be right or would you rather be happy?

As a marriage counselor I often ask people if they’d rather be right or they’d rather be happy. Although nearly everyone says they would prefer happiness, the battle enjoins over right or wrong. If you pause and consider it, it’s really insane isn’t it? The very fact that we’d mindlessly choose to win an argument at the cost of damaging our relationships points to something terribly amiss. This inclination leads to the need to win an argument, which assures that no one is actively listening. If I need to be right, and we have differing points of view, that obviously makes you wrong. Doesn’t exactly sound like the stuff of friendships, let alone romantic relations. This compulsion to be right sidetracks our lives and impedes our learning and happiness.

Why is it so vital to be right?

It’s curious how mightily our thoughts and beliefs defend their territory. Why is it so vital to be right? Well to begin with, if you’re not right, then you are indeed wrong, with all the accompanying sense of humiliation and failure. But is this a given? Does it have to be this way? Could we accept being incorrect without any loss or embarrassment?

I believe this fixation is more likely wed to highly competitive cultures than traditionally-oriented cooperative societies. In the latter, issues of right or wrong don’t equivalently inform one’s sense of self or identity. The ego may be shaped by other influences such as being honored, respected or altruistic. In first world cultures the drive to be right advances one in the competitive race. In the desire to get ahead this is utilized as a core value. I would actually suggest that this is a highly pervasive fixation attachment that ruins our relationships, derails our mindfulness and erodes our natural instinct to learn.

During a 2004 news conference on the Iraqi war, a reporter asked President Bush to cite an example of a decision he regretted or an admission of something he did wrong during his presidency. Bush looked completely dumbfounded as he struggled to acknowledge having been wrong about anything. As I watched him struggle, I considered that as a child the need to be right was likely a major influence in his life. This is true of so many people. Whether due to demanding expectations of parents, a humiliating moment in a classroom or being taunted by friends, most of us remain attached to the need to be correct.

In the next post we’ll uncover the deeper roots of this problem and the solutions.

Please feel welcome to share your experience of the right or wrong dilemma

More from Mel…

Podcast #067: The Quantum Entanglement of Relationships

Find Mel on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and LinkedIn.

Be sure to check out his book: The Possibility Principle.

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Glenn Gorelick

I really enjoy your articles. Thank you for taking the time and your effort to share your creative thought provoking insights with others. I look forward to future ones.

Matthew Selznick

Thanks so much Glenn.. I’m glad they are helpful. Have you seen my DVD The Power of Mind? I believe you were at that lecture?

Linda McCracken

Hi Mel,

The synchronous receipt of your article on this topic caused me to reflect on how much I enjoyed our group a couple of years ago. This topic sheds light on a relationship problem I’m having with a family member. Too bad he lives so far away (in San Francisco), as he could benefit from exposure to a different way of thinking about the world.

Matthew Selznick

Hi Linda,
Yes–synchronicity is such a vital resource in illuminating our path. As for your family member I will be offering these new approaches and methods via webconference, so please check out my website for further details.

Noel McDermott

Hi Mel,

I was teasing a little on Twitter when I asked if we could be both happy and right, and thanks for responding in good humour.

I hold it to be true that rigid thinking doesn’t have many emotional health benefits. Rigidity of thought is one of the core features of addiction and of many conditions where folk end up very alone and very vulnerable.

We are by nature social, it’s how we come to be, via intimate social interaction from childhood onwards. Being social involves give and take, getting it right, getting it wrong.

I guess there is a case for looking at rigid thinking as a thing in it’s own right and in need of special attention.

Once one develops flexibility then being right isn’t the only option.

Personally I would chose being happy over being right anytime. Also I have to say that being wrong in a relationship is a normal healthy part of it all: in fact if you don’t get things wrong you are going to miss out on all the fun of making up. Making up can be sooo much fun.

Kind regards

Noel

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