On this page
- The Problem: Flawed Scripts and the Illusion of Control
- The Danger of Forcing Your Life Into a Perfect Story
- Why Your Future Doesn’t Need to Match Your Past
- The Crowd-Pleaser Script: Living for Validation
- Rejecting the “Hollywood” Script for True Fulfillment
- The Psychology Behind the Scripts: Cognitive Dissonance & Narrative Identity
- Why Cognitive Dissonance Keeps You Stuck
- Is Your Life Story Holding You Back?
- Is Your “Self” an Illusion? Narrative Identity and Change
- Rewrite Your Life Story: Embrace Change
- Breaking Free: Rewriting Your Story
- Why Unlearning Is the Hardest Part of Growth
- Embracing Pain: The First Step to Freedom
- How to Break Free From Sunk Costs
- Stop Chasing Validation—Follow Your True Desires
- Conclusion
- Footnotes
I’ve always been suspicious of people who claim their lives make perfect sense. You know the type—the ones who can trace their career path in a straight line, who say their passions have always aligned, who insist every setback was just a stepping stone to where they are now. It’s not that I don’t believe in coherence; it’s that I don’t trust it.
Because the truth is, most of us are walking contradictions. We’re bundles of desires, regrets, and half-baked dreams that refuse to fit neatly into a five-act structure.
And yet, we keep trying to force it. We edit our resumes to look linear, we stay in relationships that stopped making sense years ago, and we ignore the gnawing feeling that maybe—just maybe—we’ve been following a script that wasn’t ours to begin with. The question isn’t whether your life tells a good story. It’s whether that story is strangling the person you’re meant to become.
What if the most liberating thing you could do is stop trying to make sense? Perhaps the meaning you’re seeking isn’t meant to be found, but created.
The Problem: Flawed Scripts and the Illusion of Control
The Danger of Forcing Your Life Into a Perfect Story
We’re obsessed with the idea that our lives should read like a well-structured novel—each chapter flowing logically from the last, every decision justifying the one before it. But this obsession with narrative coherence is a trap. It forces us to contort our choices to fit a story that often isn’t even ours. We rewrite our CVs to make our careers look linear, we avoid opportunities that don’t “make sense” on paper, and we ignore the quiet voice inside us that might be pulling us in a different direction.
The result? A life that looks good in a biography but feels hollow in reality. Research on narrative identity shows that while coherence is important for psychological well-being, too much of it can be stifling.
A life story that’s too neat, too predictable, lacks the richness of real human experience. Dan P. McAdams’ work suggests that the most meaningful narratives aren’t the ones that tie everything up in a bow—they’re the ones that embrace complexity, contradiction, and even failure.
Yet, we cling to the illusion of a perfect narrative because it gives us a sense of control. But what if the most interesting stories are the ones that don’t make sense until much later—or ever? 1 2
Why Your Future Doesn’t Need to Match Your Past
The idea that our future must logically follow from our past is one of the most limiting beliefs we hold. It’s why someone with a degree in finance feels trapped in corporate jobs, even if their true passion lies in art or activism. It’s why we stay in relationships, careers, or cities long after they’ve stopped serving us—because leaving would disrupt the story we’ve told ourselves and others. But life isn’t a resume.
It’s not a LinkedIn profile. It’s a messy, nonlinear journey where the most transformative moments often come from left turns, not straight paths. This fallacy is deeply tied to cognitive dissonance. When we’re confronted with a choice that doesn’t align with our past, we experience discomfort.
Our brains scramble to justify why we shouldn’t take that risk, even if it’s exactly what we need. The greater the importance we place on our past identity, the more intense this dissonance becomes.
But here’s the thing: the people who live the most fulfilling lives are often the ones who’ve learned to tolerate—and even embrace—that discomfort. They understand that growth isn’t about consistency; it’s about evolution. 3 4
The Crowd-Pleaser Script: Living for Validation
We’ve all done it—chosen a job, a project, or even a life path because of how it would look to others. The crowd-pleaser script is insidious because it masquerades as ambition. We chase prestigious titles, impressive projects, and social media-worthy milestones, not because they fulfill us, but because they make us look good. The problem?
This script keeps us trapped in a cycle of seeking validation instead of meaning. We become actors in our own lives, performing for an audience that may not even be paying attention. This script is reinforced by the pressure to maintain a consistent narrative.
If we’ve spent years building a reputation as the “successful corporate lawyer,” it’s terrifying to pivot to something less glamorous, even if it’s what we truly want. The fear of looking irrational—or worse, like a failure—keeps us stuck.
But what if the most admirable thing you could do is stop performing? What if the real crowd-pleaser is the person who lives authentically, even if it doesn’t fit the script? 5 2
Rejecting the “Hollywood” Script for True Fulfillment
The Hollywood script is the most seductive of all. It tells us that our lives must be epic—full of grand achievements, dramatic transformations, and undeniable impact. Anything less feels like failure. But this script is a fantasy.
It’s not that big, bold goals are inherently bad; it’s that they often come at the expense of what truly matters: joy, connection, and inner peace. We sacrifice years chasing a “purpose” that was never ours to begin with, only to realize too late that we’ve been living someone else’s idea of success. The truth is, the most meaningful lives aren’t always the ones that look impressive from the outside.
They’re the ones where people have the courage to define success on their own terms—whether that’s raising a family, creating art no one sees, or simply finding contentment in the ordinary. The Hollywood script keeps us chasing external validation, but fulfillment comes from within. It’s time to rewrite the script. 5 3
The Psychology Behind the Scripts: Cognitive Dissonance & Narrative Identity
Why Cognitive Dissonance Keeps You Stuck
We’ve all been there—staring at a crossroads, knowing deep down that one path is calling to us, yet feeling an almost physical resistance to taking it. That resistance? It’s cognitive dissonance, the psychological friction that arises when our actions threaten to contradict the story we’ve been telling ourselves. It’s the reason a corporate lawyer with a secret passion for painting might never pick up a brush, or why someone in a loveless marriage stays for years, rationalizing that “it’s not that bad.”
The discomfort isn’t just emotional; research shows it can trigger physiological arousal, lighting up brain regions tied to both emotion and cognition. What’s insidious about this mechanism is how it masquerades as rationality.
Your brain, desperate to maintain internal consistency, will contort itself into pretzels to justify why you shouldn’t take that risky leap. “You’ve spent a decade climbing the corporate ladder—quitting now would be irrational.” “Your friends all think you’re the stable one—what would they say if you moved to Bali to teach yoga?” These aren’t just passing thoughts; they’re the psychological immune system kicking in, trying to protect the integrity of your narrative identity.
And the more you’ve invested in that story, the louder the alarm bells ring when you consider deviating from it. But here’s the kicker: the discomfort you feel isn’t a sign that you’re making a wrong choice—it’s often a sign that you’re on the verge of a necessary evolution.
The people who break free from their scripts aren’t the ones who avoid dissonance; they’re the ones who learn to sit with it, to tolerate the temporary chaos of a story in flux. They understand that growth isn’t about maintaining consistency—it’s about embracing the messiness of becoming someone new.
Is Your Life Story Holding You Back?
Narrative identity isn’t just a personal construct; it’s a cultural one. From the moment we’re old enough to understand stories, we’re fed a very specific script about what a “good life” should look like: linear progression, upward mobility, clear milestones. This script is so deeply ingrained that we often don’t even question it—we just assume that if our life doesn’t fit the mold, we’re doing something wrong. But what if the problem isn’t our lives?
What if it’s the mold itself? The pressure to conform to this cultural narrative is subtler than you might think.
It’s not just about overt expectations—it’s about the stories we’re exposed to, the media we consume, even the way we’re taught to introduce ourselves at parties. (“So, what do you do?”) These scripts shape our sense of what’s possible, what’s admirable, what’s even allowed.
And when our true desires don’t align with them, we experience a double whammy of cognitive dissonance: not only are we betraying our own story, but we’re also stepping out of the collective one. This is why so many people stay in unfulfilling careers or relationships long after they’ve stopped serving them. The fear isn’t just of failure—it’s of becoming unrecognizable, both to themselves and to others.
But here’s the liberating truth: the most interesting people I know are the ones who’ve dared to defy the script. They’re the ones who’ve embraced what philosopher Galen Strawson calls an “episodic” approach to life—one that doesn’t demand a neat, continuous narrative, but instead allows for reinvention, contradiction, and even failure. They understand that a life well-lived isn’t a perfectly plotted novel; it’s a collection of short stories, some of which might not even belong in the same anthology.
Is Your “Self” an Illusion? Narrative Identity and Change
One of the most pervasive myths we tell ourselves is that we’re a single, unchanging entity moving through time. This is the “diachronic” view of identity—the belief that there’s a core “you” that remains consistent from childhood to old age. But what if that’s just another script? What if the self is more fluid than we’ve been led to believe?
Research suggests that many of us are actually blends of both diachronic and episodic tendencies. We might crave the comfort of a coherent narrative, but when pressed, we struggle to actually feel a continuous connection to our past selves. Think about it: how much do you really have in common with the person you were at 15? At 25?
Even at 35? The truth is, we’re constantly evolving, and the stories we tell about ourselves are often retrospective attempts to impose order on that chaos. This isn’t to say that narrative identity is useless—far from it. Stories give our lives meaning, help us make sense of our experiences, and connect us to others.
But when we cling too tightly to a single narrative, we risk trapping ourselves in a version of ourselves that no longer fits. The key is to hold our stories lightly, to recognize that they’re tools for understanding, not cages for confining.
As philosopher Richard Kearney puts it, “The untold life is not worth living”. But the over-told life—the one that’s been edited and revised to fit a perfect arc—might be just as limiting. 4
Rewrite Your Life Story: Embrace Change
So how do we escape the tyranny of our own narratives? The first step is to recognize that the discomfort you feel when considering a major change isn’t a warning sign—it’s a feature of the human experience. Cognitive dissonance isn’t something to be avoided; it’s something to be navigated. The next time you feel that resistance, try this: instead of asking, “Does this fit my story?” ask, “Does this feel true to who I am right now?”
It’s also worth examining the stories you’ve inherited. Whose definition of success are you chasing? Whose expectations are you trying to meet? The crowd-pleaser script is particularly insidious because it’s often dressed up as ambition.
But true fulfillment comes not from performing for an audience, but from listening to the quiet voice inside that knows what you really want—even if it doesn’t make sense on paper. Finally, give yourself permission to be a work in progress. The most compelling narratives aren’t the ones with perfect arcs; they’re the ones that embrace the unpredictability of real life.
As Eunil David Cho’s research suggests, even the most episodic among us occasionally glimpse a larger narrative—and that’s enough. You don’t need to have it all figured out. You just need to trust that the next chapter will reveal itself when you’re ready to turn the page.
Breaking Free: Rewriting Your Story
Why Unlearning Is the Hardest Part of Growth
There’s a seductive myth that growth is about accumulation—adding skills, experiences, and achievements to our repertoire like trophies on a shelf. But the truth is far more uncomfortable: the hardest part of growth isn’t learning; it’s unlearning. It’s the willingness to descend the mountain you’ve spent years climbing, to hit reset, and to embrace the vulnerability of being a beginner again. This resistance to starting over is deeply human.
As Naval Ravikant points out, “Everybody wants to start where they are. Nobody wants to go back down the mountain to find the path going to the top” 6. We cling to our sunk costs—the degrees we’ve earned, the careers we’ve built, the identities we’ve cultivated—because admitting they might not serve us anymore feels like admitting failure. But what if the real failure is staying on a path that no longer aligns with who we are?
The beginner’s mind isn’t just for artists or entrepreneurs; it’s for anyone who refuses to let their past dictate their future. The irony is that the skills and knowledge we’ve acquired often become the very things holding us back. They create blind spots, making it harder to see new possibilities.
The corporate lawyer who dreams of painting, the engineer who longs to write—these aren’t just whims; they’re signals from a deeper self that’s been drowned out by the noise of “shoulds” and “musts.” The courage to start over isn’t about discarding everything you’ve learned; it’s about recognizing that some lessons have outlived their usefulness.
Embracing Pain: The First Step to Freedom
Suffering, in many ways, is the gap between the story we tell ourselves and the reality we’re living. Naval Ravikant frames it perfectly: “Suffering is the moment when you see things as they clearly are, and you don’t like what you see” 6. It’s the moment you realize your marriage has been hollow for years, your career is a gilded cage, or your pursuit of external validation has left you feeling empty. That moment of clarity is painful because it forces you to confront the dissonance between your narrative and your truth.
But here’s the twist: that pain isn’t the enemy. It’s the catalyst. The children in Festinger’s classic cognitive dissonance experiment who faced mild punishment for playing with a forbidden toy later avoided it not because they feared consequences, but because they had to justify their choice to themselves. Similarly, when we avoid confronting our own suffering, we’re not protecting ourselves—we’re deepening the dissonance.
The longer we ignore the truth, the more energy we waste maintaining the illusion. The way out? Stop avoiding the pain. Name it.
Sit with it. Ask yourself: What am I refusing to see because it would disrupt the story I’ve built? The answer might be that your PhD in social science isn’t the prison you think it is—it’s just a chapter, not the whole book.
Or that the relationship you’ve been clinging to out of habit is actually keeping you from the love you deserve. Suffering isn’t the problem; avoiding it is.
How to Break Free From Sunk Costs
Sunk costs are the emotional equivalent of quicksand. The more you struggle to justify them, the deeper you sink. Think about the therapist who noted that 30-40% of his patients made a career change within 18 months of therapy 4. That’s not a coincidence—it’s the natural outcome of people finally giving themselves permission to question the investments they’ve made in paths that no longer serve them.
The sunk cost fallacy isn’t just about money; it’s about identity. It’s the voice that says, I’ve spent a decade in this industry—I can’t leave now, or I’ve put so much into this relationship—I’d be a failure if I walked away. But what if the real failure is staying?
What if the “bad decisions” you’ve made— the career pivots, the failed projects, the detours—were actually necessary steps to where you’re meant to be? The therapist’s observation that “some of the best decisions you can make in life are terrible decisions” is profound.
It’s a reminder that the scripts we follow—about success, stability, and linear progress—are often flawed. The people who break free aren’t the ones who avoid bad decisions; they’re the ones who recognize that sometimes, the “wrong” choice is the one that leads to growth.
Stop Chasing Validation—Follow Your True Desires
External validation is a drug. It gives us a temporary high— the praise, the likes, the promotions—but it’s never enough. The crowd-pleaser script is insidious because it disguises itself as ambition. You chase the prestigious job, the impressive title, the social media-worthy life, not because it fulfills you, but because it makes you look good to others.
But here’s the thing: the audience you’re performing for isn’t even paying that much attention. They’re too busy performing their own scripts. The real tragedy isn’t that you’re not getting enough validation; it’s that you’re wasting your one wild and precious life chasing it. The alternative?
Align your actions with your true desires, not the expectations of others. This isn’t about selfishness; it’s about authenticity. When you listen to that quiet voice inside— the one that knows what you actually want, not what you’ve been told you should want—you start living a life that feels like yours. It might not look impressive on paper.
It might not fit the Hollywood script. But it will be real.
And in the end, isn’t that what we all want? Not a perfect story, but a true one. 1
Conclusion
So here we are, at the end of this conversation about the stories we tell ourselves—and the ones we outgrow. The truth is, the most compelling lives aren’t the ones that follow a script flawlessly. They’re the ones that dare to rip up the script when it no longer serves them.
Think about it: the discomfort you feel when considering a radical change? That’s not a warning sign. It’s the sound of your life trying to break free from a narrative that’s become too small for you.
The sunk costs, the cognitive dissonance, the fear of what others will think—these aren’t reasons to stay. They’re just the static of a story that’s running out of pages.
And maybe that’s the real work of living: not to craft a perfect narrative, but to hold your story lightly enough that you can rewrite it when the time comes. To recognize that the person you were at 25 (or 35, or 45) isn’t the same person you are now—and that’s not just okay, it’s necessary. The lawyer who becomes a painter, the engineer who writes poetry, the parent who finally admits they hate their job—these aren’t failures of consistency. They’re acts of courage.
So here’s the question to sit with: What if the next chapter of your life doesn’t need to make sense with the last one? What if the most interesting part of your story is the part you haven’t written yet? Sometimes the most beautiful narratives emerge from the fragments we never planned. Because in the end, life isn’t about tying up loose ends.
It’s about leaving room for the unexpected. For the detours. For the plot twists that don’t fit neatly into a five-act structure. (And honestly, isn’t that where the best stories come from?)
The most liberating thing you can do is stop trying to make sense—and start living instead. After all, the only script you’re truly obligated to follow is the one you write for yourself.
Footnotes
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Cho ED. Do We All Live Story-Shaped Lives? Narrative Identity, Episodic Life, and Religious Experience. Religions. 2021; 12(2):71. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12020071 ↩ ↩2
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Chapter 8: Cognitive Dissonance Theory — Leon Festinger – Introduction to Communication Inquiry & Theory ↩ ↩2
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How Shame-Based Motivation Backfires - Dr K HealthyGamer ↩ ↩2 ↩3
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How To Live Freely In A Goal-Obsessed World - Anne-Laure Le Cunff ↩ ↩2