As I left dinner Saturday, it was about an hour before sunset. There had been a brief rainstorm, but there was a sudden break in the clouds — and the sunlight danced over the glistening world around me.
In the wet sparkle of water and light, the colors were vivid and everything was beautiful, like a triumphant scene from a movie. The world around me felt gorgeous and perfect. In those moments, I was in love with this life on Earth.
And then my attention shifted to some rude and uncouth people near me. I looked over in the car seat next to me and saw the mail from the IRS which arrived Friday, demanding that I pay another $300. And I thought of walking into the house right after opening the letter — and finding Molly dead.
In that moment, life felt unhappy and solitary. It felt miserable.
As I drove toward home, I found myself trying to resolve the extremes which I had just felt. Is this world a lonely and miserable place that’s our personal hell? Or is it a beautiful and amazing place of ecstasy that’s a personal paradise.
And in a blinding flash, I realized that it’s both — and I realized it can’t be paradise unless we’ve also experienced it as a hell.

Sudden realization of hunger for taste of kindred soul is killing me
I can’t tell truth about my father unless I dig for truth about me
Living behind a mask means you won’t allow real self to be loved
Now that his threat is truly gone, I realize my father hated himself
Too many voices with little to say: Politics matters less and less to me
Minnesota protects its citizens from the horrors of free education online
Spending all of life in politics leaves many out of touch with real people
Grief keeps reopening the door my loving mother walked out of