Hank Williams is an unlikely choice as a potential role model for me.
He was a singer and songwriter, but I’ve never had the least bit of musical talent. He was closely identified with country music, which I grew up hating. He was a hard-drinking man who was closely identified with the honky-tonks that I’ve always found distasteful.
I grew up hearing about Williams and his music, though. My father used to sing some of Williams’ old songs and I was struck by how emotional and authentic they sounded. (Williams had been popular when my father was in high school and college.) That didn’t seem like country music to me. It just seemed like the music of loneliness and heartbreak and redemption.
I haven’t given much thought to Williams and his music over the years, but I’ve been watching the Ken Burns documentary “Country Music” in the last few days. As I’ve come to understand more about this Alabama musician who’s been called the Hillbilly Shakespeare, it stirred something in my soul that I rarely allow myself to look at anymore.
And I couldn’t help admitting — quietly, where no one could hear — that I still want to be a star.

Vile human cost of war ignored by Americans playing political games
Until you ask the right questions, you’ll never find missing answers
As we enjoyed the sunset together, language and borders didn’t matter
In a sane world, everyone would think and act exactly the way I do
Obama’s delusion about ‘explaining’ illustrates all-too-common narcissism
Thirst for love and understanding drives all of us until it’s quenched
Something in us usually wants to believe next year will be different
That huge fed debt increase? They’ve already used 60 percent of it
Only through death of empires can something new take their places