One of my biggest problems in life is constantly falling for the delusion that I can get people with wildly divergent views — people who hate each other — to see things differently. I have the delusional belief that I can help people find common ground by giving both sides a third way of looking at a problem.
Objectively, I know that I’m wrong to believe I can change the way others see things, but I spend too much time trying to play this unintentional “mediator” role.
And it often takes an emotional toll on me. That’s what it’s doing right now.
I’m going to really try to step back from commenting on anything around Donald Trump right now, simply because his supporters and his most dishonest detractors are upsetting me equally. I find that there’s no way to deal with all of the dishonesty coming from both sides about Trump.
I’ve made it very clear — for years — that I think Trump is a lying narcissist who is uniquely dangerous. He is an evil man. Nobody could confuse me for someone who has any support for him, but I’m also infuriated by people who base their attacks against him on irrational and dishonest arguments.

‘You cannot love in moderation’ – lukewarm love’s worse than none
I’m losing need to explain myself to those who misunderstand me
Why do we create families? It’s a ‘matter of the heart,’ not head
Rights or choices? It might be time to re-frame the debate
Words I wrote as idealistic teen suggest I’m still the same inside
Creative process isn’t pretty, but it provides real joy when it works
Jobs are created from ‘selfish’ acts; they don’t just exist on their own
Theft is biggest problem with customers not tipping gay server