I no longer recognize the person I was when I was 25 years old.
I don’t quite know who I was. I was managing editor of a small daily newspaper. I was good at my job. I was brash. Ambitious. Arrogant. I knew it all. I was going to change the world.
And that precocious and baby-faced man was married, too.
I rarely mention having been married back then, although I wrote about it here a couple of years ago. In fact, I rarely think about it. That’s a part of my life that feels completely foreign to me now. It’s almost as though it never happened.
Even though she and I have been divorced for years now, I still have the highest regard for the woman I married back then. We still have friendly correspondence every now and then. I’m very happy that she married a man who seems perfect for her. They have a fine son and they’re both college journalism professors.
When we married, I thought she was my soulmate. I thought our marriage was for life. So what happened? Was I wrong to think we were soulmates? Or was it something else?

Those we love change who we are and reflect who we’re becoming
In a culture that worships youth, we’re scared to look in a mirror
Can a free society tolerate intrusions into details of ‘The Lives of Others’?
Question the ‘experts’: They don’t know as much as they think
In a saner world, we would never hear a word about Jussie Smollett
Let’s try a candid conversation just for the few who want to hear
If you’re driven to create beauty, you’re an artist — like it or not
‘Resisting arrest’? When police have wrongly invaded your home?