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.

Blind faith in our ability to reason led to arrogance, false certainty
Correcting an old error: there’s no such thing as ‘We the People’
When we don’t feel understood, we feel lonely even in a crowd
Time for anger? Dissent is good, but ask what the dissenters stand for
To save my own sanity, it’s time for me to shut up about Trump
Now that his threat is truly gone, I realize my father hated himself
This is why people are confused about what anarchists really are
Trivial distractions keep us from focusing on love and connection