When I’m scared or down or even humiliated by something in my life, there’s a defiant voice in me that says out loud — in a tone that sounds more like desperation — “I love you!”
I actually always include her name, but that’s not the point here. It’s not a conscious thing. It’s an unconscious pleading of some sort that I can’t explain. Some inner part of me that I don’t control turns to someone’s spirit or image in a child-like way, as though asking for shelter or love or understanding.
I don‘t know exactly when this started, but I asked a psychologist about it and she said she had never heard of anyone doing such a thing. We talked about it quite a bit over a period of weeks. She eventually had an opinion.
“You should listen to this voice,” she said in words that I’m obviously paraphrasing by now. “It seems to me that this is a primal or deep part of you that’s underneath the surface. Just like all of us, you have a lot of competing interests and voices inside — and this is the powerful, authentic voice that needs to be heard when you’re in need. You might not trust her, but you love her and you need her.”
And that was the beginning of my slow education about the competing voices inside me — and that you have inside yourself — which don’t necessarily want the same things.

For me, money always comes best when I’m pursuing higher purpose
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Ohio high school shooting shouldn’t be excuse to take more guns away
Dickens’ ‘David Copperfield’ far superior to postmodern novels
Freedom lovers, why do so many of you still blindly trust the GOP?
Next, this city is going to be selling lemonade and holding bake sales
Industrial age relic: Do companies pay for your time or your brain?
Just a performance: actors and politicians have a lot in common
Why is it ‘isolationism’ to oppose killing those who didn’t attack us?