I’ve never wanted to be popular. In fact, I’ve always been pretty prideful about going my own way and not trying to get people to like me. I saw it as some perverse badge of honor.
But I recently had a disturbing thought. What if I believed I never cared about popularity simply because I was afraid I couldn’t be what other people wanted? What if I told myself I didn’t care about being popular because I didn’t think I could do it?
I’m asking myself some difficult questions lately, not because I’m smart or wise, but because I’m desperate. I’m not happy with the results I’ve been getting in my life. After an early life that seemed to promise an easy ride to incredible success, I somehow got off track. I stumbled and humiliated myself.
I’m sick of not becoming the success everyone thought I would be. I’m sick of trying to force myself to accept lowered expectations. And I’m finally sick enough to ask myself what I’m doing wrong — and what it’s going to take to become the success I wanted to be.
I fear that might require me to care — for the first time in my life — about making myself popular. And that terrifies me more than I can explain.

Love & Hope — Episode 4:
Dad who made space for daughter reminds me little moments matter
Today’s group hatred says world hasn’t learned Auschwitz lessons
Party of ‘limited government’ fails when given chance to shrink state
It’s official: U.S. government debt no longer gets top rating from S&P
Illusions we project for others allow us to remain hidden inside
Global warming or a new ice age? Anyone who claims to know is lying
To think clearly, turn off the tube: Your television is not your friend
‘I understand all you’re saying, but what if I’ve waited too late?’