For just a moment, I thought she was going to cry.
She had turned her body and her face away from her husband and their two young children. I don’t think she knew anybody could see her. There was pain in her face. It wasn’t anger. It was the pain of disappointment and resignation. And then she pasted her mask back on and returned to the life which seemed to hurt her so much.
That’s what I saw anyway. Maybe I’m wrong. But for the long moment when I looked into her face and saw something that no human should have to feel, time slowed and I felt as though I could have reached out and touched her soul.
This was Friday night in the Walmart near my house, but I see similar pain on faces all around me, almost every day. I see people who I believe are miserable. It seems as though the pain and hurt and disappointment are etched onto their faces — hidden briefly by masks — and I wonder why nobody else seems to see what I see.

Of all the world’s contradictions, our own actions confuse us most
Who was this attractive woman? Why did her story not ring true?
What if all truth and all beauty can be traced back to one source?
What would your obit say about you — if you could write it yourself?
Don’t show me the past or the future; show me what you can give now
Calif. Gov. Jerry Brown: ‘Not every human problem deserves a law’