As I walked Lucy through the neighborhood a couple of nights ago, I waved at a neighbor who was sitting on his front porch and smoking a cigarette. I like this guy a lot, but my immediate reaction was judgment.
“He knows that’s deadly,” I thought. “Why in the world would he keep doing something that’s going to kill him?”
And then my inner observer laughed at me mockingly.
“And why do you keep eating things that you know will kill you?” the voice teased. “Do you think you’re better than he is?”
I’m a hypocrite. You probably are, too. We all love to judge others harshly while we create excuses for behaviors in ourselves which are just as bad — and sometimes worse. My deadly diet is among my worst habits — and it makes me a hypocrite to criticize anyone else who’s making unhealthful choices.
I fear that the modern American diet is going to kill me. Nobody is forcing it on me, but I feel trapped in a deadly pattern — and there are many millions on the same path of slow suicide with me.

How many of these Christmas myths did you assume were from the Bible?
Nobody has the right to a position in your life which you don’t want
Collectivists think they’re doing us favors as they force herd to follow
Don’t blame politicians; you’re to blame for growth of government
$22,600 for a library router for four users? No wonder states are broke
Why do we create families? It’s a ‘matter of the heart,’ not head
FDA’s war on margarine is really an attack on your freedom of choice
How can I make sense of a world that’s fundamentally nonsensical?
Reading through hundreds of my old articles has been unsettling