When I was a little boy, the wait for Christmas each year seemed to take forever. Even in the summer — or even after school had started back in the fall — the weeks until Christmas went by at a snail’s pace.
If you can remember being a child — and dreaming about what you might get for Christmas or whatever holiday your family celebrated — you probably remember feeling the same way.
When you’re 5 years old, the time until another Christmas represents 20 percent of the time you’ve been alive. That might as well have been forever back then.
When I thought about what I would be in the future — when I got old enough to start having oversized ambitions for myself — my life seemed to stretch to eternity. My parents had lived half their lives. My grandparents have lived most of theirs. But I had forever to become what I was meant to be.
For the first time in my life, I feel a clock ticking. I no longer have forever. I have decades left in which I can live and love, but the years are flying by. The time from one Christmas to the next is now a blur.
I still have plenty of time, but it’s no longer forever. And for the first time in my life, I’m feeling a fear I’ve never known. What if I don’t find the love and the life I’ve always needed?

Don’t trust this con man — or almost anybody else on ‘TV news’
National sugar daddy? Warren Buffet wants to give us money … sorta
I’m exhausted and numb from placing trust in the wrong people
Romantic attraction is a trickster, appearing when we least expect it
When love finally dies, it’s like a fever breaks and the pain is gone
Maybe we’re doomed to replay past until we finally get it right
I don’t know how to fix race issues, but anger at race-baiters won’t help