“I Hate Being Right All the Time” – The Delusional Anthem of Someone Who Thinks They Are Always Right

A satirical digital illustration of a smug person standing on a soapbox, declaring, "I hate being right all the time!", while an audience rolls their eyes, yawns, or checks their watches in exaggerated boredom. The image humorously captures the absurdity of someone who thinks they are always right.


Ah, the noble sufferer who constantly bemoans, "I hate being right all the time." Yes, of course, mate. Must be exhausting being the sole beacon of truth in a world full of morons. It must be draining to carry the weight of all that knowledge, enlightening the unfortunate souls who dare to breathe in your presence. Truly, our thoughts and prayers are with you during this difficult time.

Now, let’s get real. When someone who thinks they are always right says, "I hate being right all the time," they don’t hate it. They love it. They live for it. Their entire personality is built around the smug satisfaction of correcting people mid-sentence, quoting Wikipedia like it’s scripture, and declaring victory in every argument—even the ones they clearly lost.

But here’s the problem: someone who thinks they are always right is usually not. In fact, the more convinced they are of their intellectual superiority, the more likely it is that they are, objectively, full of shit.

This post is a deep dive into their delusion: the psychology, the tactics, and the best ways to deal with someone who thinks they are always right (without completely losing your will to live). Because arguing with someone who is never wrong is about as useful as debating a goldfish—except the goldfish probably has a better sense of self-awareness.


1. The Science Behind Someone Who Thinks They Are Always Right

You know what’s funny? The actual smartest people in the world—scientists, philosophers, world-class thinkers—are the ones who constantly question themselves. They know that knowledge is ever-evolving, that new information can change everything, and that uncertainty is part of being an intelligent human.

And then, there’s someone who thinks they are always right—the human embodiment of a Google search gone wrong, confidently spewing half-baked theories like they belong in a TED Talk.

So, what makes someone who thinks they are always right so bloody insufferable?

Cognitive Biases – The Brain’s Greatest Scam

Your average know-it-all is deeply in love with their own opinion, and that’s largely thanks to cognitive biases—mental shortcuts designed to make thinking easier but, ironically, make people dumber.

  • Confirmation Bias: They only acknowledge information that supports their existing beliefs. Anything that contradicts them? FAKE NEWS.
  • Dunning-Kruger Effect: A psychological phenomenon where people with low ability in a particular area tend to overestimate their competence, while those who are genuinely skilled are often plagued by self-doubt. In other words, the less someone knows, the more they think they know. It's like watching a chihuahua try to fight a Great Dane—it has no idea how outmatched it is.
  • Overconfidence Bias: They genuinely believe they’re more knowledgeable than they actually are. If they once guessed a random quiz answer correctly in 2012, they now consider themselves a trivia god.

Why Admitting Fault Feels Like an Existential Crisis

To someone who thinks they are always right, admitting they’re not is akin to pulling the pin on a grenade and shoving it down their own pants. It’s not just an “Oops, my bad” moment—it’s a full-blown identity crisis.

Why? Because their entire self-worth is based on being correct. They’re not confident because they’re actually right all the time—they’re confident because they need to be. Without that belief, they’re just an insecure mess with no personality outside of arguing with someone who is never wrong (because let’s face it, they tend to only associate with other know-it-alls).

So, if you’re expecting someone who thinks they are always right to one day wake up and say, “Wow, maybe I was wrong about that”—don’t hold your breath. The day that happens is the day Elon Musk logs off Twitter permanently.


2. Why Arguing With Someone Who Thinks They Are Always Right Is a Waste of Oxygen

Do you enjoy banging your head against a wall? Does the idea of debating a brick sound fun to you? Then, by all means, argue with someone who thinks they are always right.

For the rest of us, let’s acknowledge the truth: you cannot win.

Classic Know-It-All Debate Tactics

A know-it-all doesn’t argue to exchange ideas. They argue to win—and they’ll use every underhanded tactic to do it. Watch out for these:

  • Gaslighting: "I never said that!" (Yes, you did. Five minutes ago.)
  • Shifting the Goalposts: You prove them wrong? They immediately change the subject.
  • Word Salad: A random mix of jargon, pseudo-science, and nonsense designed to confuse you into submission.
  • Loudness Over Logic: If they just yell their point enough, surely it becomes true, right?

The best way to win? Don’t engage. Seriously. Walking away from their nonsense is the only real victory.


3. How to Make Someone Who Thinks They Are Always Right Implode (By Hardly Saying A Word)

If arguing is a lost cause, how do you handle these people without losing your will to live? Simple: you mess with them—strategically.

1. The Power of Silence

Nothing frustrates someone who thinks they are always right more than being ignored. When they’re mid-rant, just stare at them. No nodding. No expressions. Just deadpan silence. Let their words hang in the air until they start feeling awkward.

2. Ask One Question That Destroys Their World

When dealing with someone who thinks they are always right, ask them this simple question:

"What would convince you that you’re wrong?"

Watch their brain short-circuit. Because the answer is: nothing. They don’t want to be right—they need to be right.

3. Plant the Seed of Doubt and Walk Away

A well-timed "Huh. That’s an interesting perspective." followed by complete silence will haunt them for days. Let them stew in their own paranoia.

4. Know When to Walk Away

Some battles aren’t worth fighting. If someone who thinks they are always right is so committed to their self-righteous delusion, the best thing you can do is smile, nod, and remove yourself from the conversation.

Because at the end of the day, there’s one thing a know-it-all hates more than being wrong—being ignored.


Conclusion

The world is full of people who think they are always right—the self-proclaimed intellectuals who believe their opinions are facts and that disagreeing with them is an act of war.

But here’s the real truth: certainty is a myth. The smartest people know they don’t know everything.

So, the next time you encounter someone who thinks they are always right, don’t waste your energy proving them wrong. Just sit back, smile, and let them unravel under the weight of their own arrogance.

Because deep down, they know. They just won’t admit it.


Get the book!

Enjoying the blog? Why not grab a copy of the book that ties it all together, 127 Reasons Why You Are An Idiot! Chock full of 127 hilarious, sweary, sarcastic, hard-hitting rants about everyday things that everyday idiots do, with quasi-serious, tongue-in-cheek exercises to help idiots be less idiotic.
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