Starting when I was a freshman in college, I worked as a part-time newspaper reporter. As the youngest and most inexperienced person in my newsroom, I was given the assignments nobody else wanted. The job taught me how little I knew about people.
I frequently went to a home or office out in the middle of a rural nowhere — on a dirt road 30 or 40 miles from the office — and I couldn’t imagine the people there could have anything interesting to say. It was a prideful attitude from a young man who thought too much of himself.
I soon discovered that even the most mundane person has a story — some meaningful narrative about what he’s seen or felt or lived through. Many times, though, their stories seemed so routine to them that they didn’t recognize the drama or inspiration that they had to share.
I often left interviews with “boring” people — folks who I’d met with a feeling of disdain — with a sense of humility and a realization that I was the one who didn’t yet have much wisdom to share.

Galt’s Gulch? I can live without that, but I need my own ‘Akston’s diner’
Intense emotions let me feel alive — but hurt comes along with joy
Biases teach us what to expect, but we often turn out to be wrong
If you can’t change your life story, that narrative will become destiny
Everything sounded fair at the time, so why’d I end up paying for it all?
Search for sexual pleasure can slowly destroy genuine intimacy
My own question now faced me: ‘Would a healthy person do that?’
Atlanta police arrest wrong Teresa, but keep her locked up for 53 days
I need to communicate meaning, but my words vanish into a void