On the value of "Wrongness"
Humanity has been controlled in the most efficient of ways. Even in such individualist cultures, authenticity is feigned and filtered through a myriad of systems, the likes of which could make Foucault vomit. To be one's self in our contemporary age is to adhere to a kind of guideline, to do one's makeup in a certain way, to purchase clothing at a certain outlet, to espouse certain opinions, read certain books, and believe certain things. And if you do not surrender yourself to these pre-requisites, you are (ironically) deemed inauthentic. Humanity is tyrannised by the ideology of doing things "the right way", or holding "the right beliefs".
I propose this: the world as you know it, is entirely constructed from your experience. If "wrongness" is what is keeping you from embracing yourself, then it is in this very "wrongness" that your authentic self resides. What good is it to align yourself with a socially constructed "right" if it bars you from the experience of living? Your life is denied from you, through this system of (supposed) morality. Perhaps it could be worth embracing this "wrongness" if it thus means you are finally able to start living? Perhaps this wrongness is not something to be shunned? Or that it is an inherent part of "you" that is simply inefficient to ignore?
Perhaps then, there is inherent value in this "wrongness"?