Why some conversations are structured to confirm, not discover truth
Most people think a discussion starts when two people begin talking.
It doesn’t.
A discussion actually starts much earlier…
👉 in how one person has already defined the other before they ever speak.
You can hear it if you listen closely.
Someone says they’re open to conversation…
But before the other person even arrives, they’ve already been described as:
- uninformed
- emotional
- having nothing to say
- unlikely to show up
At that point, something important has already happened.
The outcome has been set.
Because once a person is defined in advance…
anything they say will be filtered through that definition.
If they don’t respond:
👉 it confirms the narrative
If they do respond:
👉 it still confirms the narrative
This creates a closed loop.
Not a discussion.
It looks like openness…
But it functions as containment.
And this is where most people get pulled in without realizing it.
They think:
“I just need to explain myself better.”
So they step into the conversation…
Already standing inside a structure where:
- their credibility has been lowered
- their position has been weakened
- and their outcome has been pre-decided
At that point, they’re not participating in a discussion.
They’re participating in:
👉 a performance designed to validate someone else’s position
And the more they try to correct it…
the more energy they feed into it.
Because the structure was never built to:
- discover truth
- exchange understanding
- or refine ideas
It was built to:
👉 hold a position in place
So what do you do when you recognize this?
You stop trying to win inside it.
You stop trying to explain inside it.
You stop trying to prove anything inside it.
And you start asking a different question:
👉 “Was this ever designed to be a real conversation?”
Because once you see the structure…
you realize something most people miss:
Not every conversation is broken.
Some conversations are working exactly as designed.
They’re just not designed for truth.
🔥 The clearest signal that a conversation won’t produce truth…
is when the conclusion exists
before the first word is spoken.


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