It was dark outside as I rode toward home on the YMCA bus that night, so it must have been fall or winter. I was about 11 years old when I rode that bus twice a week from Golden Springs Elementary School to the YMCA in downtown Anniston, Ala., where I took swimming lessons and played on a basketball team, among other activities, depending on the time of year.
I was sitting at the very back of the darkened, noisy bus looking forward at all the other kids. The song on the speakers at that moment — from the radio, I presume — was the Partridge Family’s “I Think I Love You.” I don’t know why the scene is so strongly imprinted on me.
“I’m not like y’all and I don’t really like you very much,” I thought. “I’m all by myself.”
I felt a little bit afraid — not for my physical safety, of course — but I mostly felt completely alone. It’s the first time I can recall ever feeling so disconnected and alone and alienated. And in a very simple and childlike way, it was the first time I felt a yearning to be connected to someone.
It’s the first time I remember feeling so alone that I had a powerful need for love and understanding to fill a part of me that I couldn’t yet understand.

My own question now faced me: ‘Would a healthy person do that?’
When you can’t call one you love, silent phone just taunts your need
Would getting away from civilization help us live better?
Love & Hope — Episode 9:
When will you admit that a constitution can’t control state?
We fill life with noise because silence forces us to hear truth
The Alien Observer: