I get a lot of mail from people I don’t know very well (or at all). The subjects are all over the place. Some people write to say they enjoy reading what I write. A few send me nasty messages. One woman was writing love messages about me on her blog and then sending me links. A flight attendant based in Philadelphia wrote to say that she didn’t agree with me about anything politically, but she had fallen in love with me from reading anyway.
A surprisingly large number of people make personal observations about me, based on what they read here and what they see of me on my open Facebook page. I got two messages over the weekend, though, that were sort of thesis and antithesis.
“I love reading what you post because you’re always so happy and nice to everybody,” one woman wrote, in part. “You’re smart and tough, but I can tell you’re really happy and love the world.”
Interesting.
“I’m thinking this inbox is a bit overdue,” a man wrote. “You seem angry lately. I actually prefer angry David vs. disinterested David … angry David remains rational in his anger.”
Both messages had additional content, but these parts stuck out to me. One person sees me as happy. Another person sees me as angry. Which is true? And what could account for people coming to such strongly different conclusions?

Blind faith in our ability to reason led to arrogance, false certainty
Intuition sometimes tells you when someone is worth chasing
Intelligent, well-meaning people often pull in opposite directions
OK, morons, we’ll finally admit it: We really are smarter than you
In the great new culture war over Thanksgiving shopping, I’m neutral
‘Don’t ever be afraid to turn page,’ but leaving comfort zone is scary
Dying Phelps’ anti-gay cult is vile and wrong, but I don’t hate him