Me too.
I make it a point to encourage correction if I have something remembered wrong. I don't have a problem with being corrected, and actually like it, because it means my knowledge base is "more true" after the correction than it was before.
I'm much more interested in the truth, than the story in my head, no matter how appealing that story may be.
A lot of people have a hard time being corrected, and take it very personally. To those people I would say: don't be defined by what you know, but rather who you are. That way, you won't have a personal stake if you find out something you believed was wrong.
Tough advice, I know.
Mark Twain: "'It's easier to fool people than to convince them that they have been fooled.'
Yeeesh.
What a bunch of hot air.
Did RMA say RMA is a lot of hot air?