When you think like that, you see the world completely differently, because we spend our time, whether it's with our family, at work, with our friends, we spend our time fighting over who is right or who is wrong, we are fighting over something that is useless and ultimately has no importance. It doesn't matter who is right, who is wrong, what matters is what is the truth.
Obviously, if I take care of myself and I obviously try to follow Marcus Aurelius' advice, namely not to seek to be right or wrong, but to seek the truth because it is the truth that helps me. But of course, it is a little against our nature or it is very difficult for us to have the reflex to admit that we are wrong.
So I try, now, more and more, when I discuss australia whatsapp number data with someone, when I have a disagreement, because often we don't agree and it's good not to agree, well I try to say to myself: "What is the truth?" I don't try to say to myself: "He's right, he's wrong", I try to say to myself: "What is the truth?" And then I try to try to use, I try to use the truth by saying to myself: "The rest is not important. Yes, I was wrong. It's true. I thought something, my interlocutor thought something else, he was right, he was the one who held the truth. And rather than trying to convince him that I hold the truth, well it's better that I admit it, that I thank him and that I adapt the truth to my need and to my life."
Of course, it's rarely that black or white. Sometimes there is not one truth, there are several truths, there are nuances. But the idea is really to try to remove emotions as much as possible, because sometimes, there are even cases and we have all more or less been there, cases during which deep down we know that we are wrong, but to the extent that we started an argument or that we started with an opinion, we say to ourselves: "I'm not going to change my opinion along the way, otherwise it would show that I am weak". So, we maintain our opinion, which we know is wrong, just out of pride, just out of ego.