That’s What I Meant To Say

When the Truth Feels Like an Attack


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Why do people cling to beliefs even after they’ve been proven wrong? In this episode, we explore what happens in the mind when deeply held beliefs are challenged, why facts alone often fail to persuade, and how emotional investment shapes what we accept as true.

Drawing on decades of psychological research, this conversation unpacks why corrections sometimes backfire, why empathy matters more than argument, and how curiosity can open doors that confrontation slams shut.

If you’ve ever wondered why misinformation spreads so easily, or why difficult conversations go nowhere, this episode offers clarity—and a more hopeful way forward.

Key Themes

* Why the brain treats belief challenges like physical threats

* How emotional reactions precede logical reasoning

* Why more evidence can sometimes make beliefs stronger

* The difference between explaining a belief and defending it

* Why timing matters when correcting misinformation

* How and why detailed corrections can unintentionally backfire

* The “truth sandwich” method and why it works

* Age, emotion, and susceptibility to misinformation

* Motivational interviewing as an alternative to confrontation

* Why empathy changes minds more effectively than argument

* Winning relationships versus winning debates

#BeliefChange#Misinformation#CriticalThinking#Psychology#TruthAndMeaning#CognitiveBias#EmpathyMatters#That’sWhatIMeantToSay#fakenews



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That’s What I Meant To SayBy James D. Newcomb