Alice Hathaway Lee was only 17 years old when she met Teddy Roosevelt in 1878. The future U.S. president was a student at Harvard University. Roosevelt was a classmate of Lee’s cousin and it was at their house they met.
As soon as Roosevelt met Alice, he wrote of her constantly in his diary. He was smitten with her. He found her beautiful and charming. He was so obsessed with Alice that he wrote of her all the time. He chronicled her acts of recognition of him, her quiet smiles, her silences — every action he saw her take, as though he never wanted to forget the slightest detail.
Eight months later, Roosevelt proposed marriage, but Alice was in no hurry. She made him wait eight more months before she agreed and the wedding was later that year.

Christmas looks different now, but I still see joy with eyes of a child
If romantic love is real and true, does it never really fade away?
I can’t help wanting to replay life with emotionally healthy parents
How do we intuitively see truth through the fog of perception?
Telling others how to escape is easier than setting myself free
Without things to look forward to, the human heart gets ready to die
Economic and moral ignorance is at root of fast food worker walkout
Experience with God taught me that my theology was too small