Changing your mind has somehow become a liability.
Once people take a position, they feel locked into it — even when the world around them changes. New information shows up. Technology improves. Context shifts. But instead of adapting, many people defend old positions out of habit, identity, or comfort.
In this episode of Zero Distortion, I talk about why open-mindedness isn’t passive and why adaptability is a skill — not a lack of conviction.
This isn’t about chasing every new idea or abandoning principles. It’s about recognizing when something genuinely works better and being willing to update your thinking instead of clinging to consistency for its own sake.
We explore:
Why refusing to adapt often gets mislabeled as “strength”
How effectiveness gets confused with loyalty to old positions
The difference between learning and defending
Why people who struggle over time aren’t uninformed — they’re inflexible
The world keeps changing whether we like it or not.
Staying effective means knowing when to hold your ground — and when to move.