“I became insane, with long intervals of horrible sanity.”
— Edgar Allan Poe, in a letter to George W. Eveleth
I had just spent most of a year wanting to be rid of a woman I had been dating for three years. I broke up with her one time but I felt so guilty that I changed my mind a few days later. I wanted her to decide I was right — that we had no future. After months of this waffling from me, the day finally came.
She was giving up on me and moving on. Suddenly, I felt hurt and stricken. I had made a terrible mistake. I wanted her back.
I was in my first year of working full-time after college. My work suddenly suffered. There was one day when I didn’t show up for work until halfway through the day. I was a basket case.
A co-worker had the perfect solution for me, though. She said I needed to pretend to be seriously ill, enough to get put into a hospital. I don’t recall the details, but she had a very serious plan. She was sure this would bring my ex running back in fear that I was dying.
Although I didn’t seriously consider her plan, this has always stood out to me as the height of love’s insanity. People in love can be desperate. They can do insane things.
But I’ve had crazy thought. What if these periods of love-driven insanity are the very best parts of life? What if it’s the period of “horrible sanity” that make life unbearable? Without the unbearable insanity of love, does life have any meaning?

What if I hadn’t been afraid to follow Paul Finebaum’s advice 20 years ago?
Loss of respect for truth leads to remorseless liar’s excuses
Pearl Harbor: Simple sneak attack or culmination of FDR’s plan for war?
Our contradictory beliefs lead to irrational views, foolish decisions
Bloomberg: Policing what you eat part of ‘government’s highest duty’
If you’re still able to read this site, Harold Camping is wrong yet again
You’re wrong! And if you don’t agree with me, you’re an evil, lying moron
Love & Hope — Episode 11:
Dogs, cats and children remind me of all the joy in small things