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  • Many of us crave to be more interesting  people. The question is how we might become so.

  • We rightly tend to associate beinginteresting’  with achieving difference from the norm:  

  • with being able to serve up some unusual  and intriguing stories and ideas

  • But what might be the best  way to lay our hands on these?

  • One prestigious thesis tells us that we should try  our best to root out new and well-reviewed books  

  • and articles, travel to remote places and befriend  people who are prominent in the arts and business.

  • This correctly latches on to somethingthat we should aim to be different - but  

  • it entirely overlooks that, before weve ever  read a single book, gone to any foreign country  

  • or met any Nobel Prize laureateswe are all compellingly different  

  • anyway. The problem is that we just don’t  allow ourselves to come across as such.

  • To get a taste for this  pre-existing level of originality,  

  • imagine if we placed a microphone in any of our  minds and listened closely in on the chatter

  • We would quickly find the most surprisingand authentically gripping information:  

  • we’d realise that we were attracted  to some very unexpected people,  

  • often just the sort we weren’t  supposed to have any feelings for.  

  • We’d realise that we had some hilariously personal  (and shocking) takes on politics and society - and  

  • that we didn’t agree with most of the standard  lines proposed to us by the media. Our anxieties,  

  • fears, hopes and excitements would showproperly distinctive and captivating pattern

  • We are - though we try so hard  never to admit this to ourselves  

  • let alone anyone else - already a real character.

  • We understand this point in relation to  children. Every child under seven is fascinating.  

  • They almost never do anything interesting  in the outside world, but it’s the honest,  

  • uncensored way in which they report on their inner  lives that guarantees their interest. When they  

  • chit chat about their granny or their teacher  or their take on their dad, were open mouthed.

  • We were once fascinating too, before we  got overly worried about seeming normal

  • There are of course some things that  we should - as we grow up - take care  

  • not to mention to spare others hurt, butlot fewer than we think. When we next fear  

  • coming across as dull, we need only lean in  more closely on the data from our deep selves:  

  • we should, and the habit may require  a little conscious effort to develop,  

  • get in touch with what we actually believeWhat emerges may sound odd, but it is also  

  • liable to be hugely charming, warm-hearted  and comforting - and a lot closer to what  

  • people around the table deep down feel too  than what was printed in today’s newspaper.

  • Everyone is interesting. So-called interesting  people are simply those whove allowed themselves  

  • to listen in on and share with others a selection  of what is really going through their minds

  • They have not allowed self-hatred and  self-suspicion to block them from disclosing  

  • their reality. They have been confident enough to  imagine that the truth about themselves could be  

  • a pleasure for others to hear - and, with a few  obvious caveats, it almost certainly will be.

Many of us crave to be more interesting  people. The question is how we might become so.

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