I had just left work Friday afternoon when I noticed clouds gathering to the west. The sun was about 20 minutes from sinking beneath the horizon, so I thought there might be a good sunset. I made a detour to the top of Shades Mountain and found a perfect spot from which to watch a glorious sunset.
Afterwards, I went straight to dinner. I looked through my photos and picked the one I liked best. As I sat there looking at a full-screen copy of the shot, I wanted to share it with someone. It wasn’t out of pride about my work. The desire came from excitement about the beauty of what I’d just experienced.
And there was nobody who I wanted to share with. That made me feel very much alone.
In that moment, I realized in a painful way how much I miss having a partner with whom to share the routine details of daily life. I miss having someone who wants to hear what happened in my day — and I miss listening to the mundane thoughts and experiences of a woman I love.
If you don’t love someone, listening to such things is a chore. If you do love someone, it’s a privilege.

Money can’t buy happiness, but poverty can make you miserable
ABC execs’ desire to delay interview shows misunderstanding of their job
If we keep waiting for perfection, we’ll always keep traveling alone
Without peaceful breakup plan, U.S. faces violent, angry collapse
I’m all broken up about ‘draconian’ cuts hitting the federal government
We learn lessons as we mature, but it’s usually too late by then
A year later, late-night phone call and suicide threat still echo in me
Thugs attacking private property aren’t anarchists; they’re vandals