Confusion

Life Feels Confusing

Humans are born with a blank hard drive. We learn from family, friends, school, and habit. Then, as we get older, we choose what to keep, what to copy, and what to reject. That will shape how you judge right and wrong. It also shapes pride, trust, blame, and responsibility.

Knowing all things, not guessing them

In plain language, omniscience means knowing all that is true. It includes the past, the present, and the future. It also includes hidden thoughts, motives, and outcomes no human can see. People learn by trial, error, memory, and advice. A Creator with full knowledge would need none of that.

This belief can steady the mind. It cuts pride down to size because your view is never complete. It can also build trust in moral truth. Right and wrong are not set by fashion, pressure, or the loudest voice in the room.

We learn from others, then call it our own

Most beliefs do not begin with careful thought. They develop through parents, peers, teachers, culture, and repeated habits. Many choices are personal, yet they were shaped early. Many people defend a custom as truth when it is only familiar to them. That is why inherited habits deserve honest assessment.

Mistakes, bias, and short memory shape what we know

People forget facts, misread motives, and retell events in ways that suit them. Bias often hides inside normal routines. Wrong ideas can spread for years because they feel safe and known. Human judgement, for that reason, needs correction, patience, and a willingness to admit error.

Good habits, bad habits, and the power of repetition

Every day, people follow patterns that train the mind and shape the will. A small lie repeated often becomes easier. A small act of honesty repeated often grows stronger. Habits can lift a life or slowly pull it off course. What you repeat today often decides who you become tomorrow.

Knowing what is right does not always mean doing it

Knowledge does not force obedience. People often know better, yet still choose comfort, fear, pleasure, or crowd approval. That gap between insight and action is part of the human struggle. Freedom needs self-rule, or habit will rule in its place.

Conclusion

A Creator who knows all does not learn step by step. Human beings do, and that fact should make us humble, not hopeless.

When you accept your limits, humility grows. Then choices become more careful, habits more honest, and the search for what is right becomes more sincere.

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