Why We All Feel Fundamentally Wrong — And How to Finally Let It Go

That nagging sense that something is fundamentally off with you?

It’s not personal. It’s ancient — and it’s been working against you your entire life.

Most of us were handed this feeling before we could even question it. Religion calls it original sin. Culture calls it human nature (“we just ruin everything”). Science might call it epigenetics — ancestral memory of civilizations that collapsed before us.

Whatever the source, the result is the same: a deep, felt sense of wrongness that no amount of achievement fixes.

Morgan knows this firsthand. At the peak of her science career — big lab, major funding — the feeling didn’t go away. It got worse*. That’s not a personal failure. *That’s the brew doing exactly what it was designed to do.

⚡️ The moment that cuts deepest: the observation that political rage, billionaire striving, and power-grabbing all trace back to the same root — people desperately trying to prove they’re not wrong. And then we call them wrong. And the pile grows.

There’s a way out.

It starts with understanding the difference between thinking you’re wrong and feeling wrong — and why that distinction changes everything. This isn’t about more reasoning. It’s about release.

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