I’ve never worried about my status in the world. I was always so confident about myself that I never tried to make people like me and I never worried about where I fit in a hierarchy.
Some people liked me. Some people didn’t like me. I had friends. Some hated me. But everybody knew where I fit wherever I was.
As a child, I was the leader of the groups I ran with, but I never really thought about it. In school, I had high status in classrooms because I was typically the new “smartest kid in class” when I moved to a new town. I was acknowledged as a leader.
In high school, I won top leadership positions in the things I cared about, at school and church. I wasn’t the most popular kid, but I was the one you wanted in charge to get things done. On my early jobs, I had quick status. I was the youngest managing editor of a daily newspaper in the country at 21. I was younger than all the people I managed.

Need for certainty is an internal tyranny that leads to the wrong path
Will I run for office? The short answer is ‘no’; the longer answer is ‘no way’
Hospital’s five-year fight to move shows health care isn’t free market
Is it just coincidence that my surgeries come when I’m alone?
Advocating peace requires more than hating those who start wars
When the night is dark and quiet, my open heart expects a miracle
Sad husband: ‘My beautiful wife is dying; I’m so sad I can’t sleep’
We find meaning in responsibility, not in pursuit of empty pleasures