It’s easy to be cynical about love today. It’s easy to conclude that love can’t last. And then something comes along that makes you think maybe love can last — connection can last — until the very end. Just maybe.
Nine days ago, a woman posted this picture on Reddit. Her simple caption said, “My Grandma, 96, with my Grandpa, 100, hours before her death this weekend. 77 years of marriage.”
I don’t know where they lived or what their names are. I’m not sure that even matters. The story is universal. The desire to be loved is universal. The desire to have someone to hold onto — in honest connection — is universal.
Most marriages I see are pretty terrible. Most relationships I see are just as bad. Most people don’t know themselves and they don’t know each other. They marry the wrong person. They live entirely different lives that are connected only by children, if at all. And most of them refuse to do anything meaningful to end their misery and learn how to make better choices.

500 years after Luther’s 95 theses, there’s still not much to celebrate
I can’t tell truth about my father unless I dig for truth about me
It’s hard to take a scary chance, but success can be breathtaking
The ‘man in the mirror’ always turns out to be our worst enemy
Unless you oppose all coercion, ‘resistance’ claim rings hollow
I’d love to move to the Caribbean, so what’s been keeping me here?
Living a sane and healthy life is now radical by world’s standards
What if we planted for future instead of spending for today?
Defense mechanism led me to repress unacceptable emotions