As I was getting gas for my car Sunday evening, a big church bus pulled into the parking lot. A few dozen noisy students from a Baptist church in Texas spilled out and headed inside for junk food to eat on the road.
I could have been one of those students not too many years ago. In high school, I was very involved in the youth group of my Baptist church in Jasper, Ala. We traveled in the summers through Alabama, Georgia, Florida, Tennessee and North Carolina. In my last year with the group — while I was a freshman in college — we traveled to Oklahoma City.
As I watched those students tonight, I saw a young man and young woman standing apart from the rest. They appeared to be a couple — and they reminded me of the night on a church bus when I nervously asked a young woman if she was wiling to date me.
I have to smile at how little I understood at that time, about love or life. Even though the young woman agreed that night to date me — and we were together for three years — I know now that neither of us had the knowledge or wisdom to know what we were doing.
And the worst thing about a human life is that we almost never have the wisdom or knowledge we need — until it’s too late to really use it.

Ocasio-Cortez and Trump just like characters in ’75 satire ‘Network’
On National Dog Day, remember how love can change any of us
When does healthy love become nothing but unhealthy obsession?
We often live in the tension between known and unknown
City rushes to demolish $4.5 million transit station after only 13 years
Loving a depressed person means holding tightly on trips through hell
Art, culture are keys to winning the future for freedom of choice
It’s OK to volunteer for tornado cleanup, but only if you’re not a pro