Some children are magnetic to other kids. They fit well in groups, because they’re so much like the others. Everybody loves them.
I was not that child.
My friends tended to be the brainy nerds and unique outcasts of the neighborhood. If everybody was playing and being social, my interests just weren’t like most people’s. I didn’t understand them, because they seemed so stupid and immature to me, which probably would have seemed strange coming from this tiny boy.
The other kids wanted me around when things needed to get done. When something needed to be built and nobody had a plan, I took charge. When students at school divided into teams for academic competition, kids wanted me to lead their team. If other kids were confused about what to do, they often turned to me.
But that didn’t mean they liked me.
I pretended I didn’t care whether people liked me, but I cared more than I wanted to admit, even to myself. I didn’t know how to be like them. It’s not that I wanted to change myself to be like them. I just wanted to find people more like me.
All these years later, I still feel the same way.

Are we destined to become our parents? Or can we be different?
Federal debt default? So what? It happened before — in 1979
Film hurts when I hear, ‘I’ve seen what we can be like together’
Memo to politicians: Coercion isn’t the same thing as ‘investment’
‘This path leads to somewhere I think I can finally say, I’m home’
Black ex-congressman speaks truth about racial ‘groupthink’ on voter ID
What if a state government shut down and no one noticed?
As I quietly watch my world burn, I’m painfully aware this isn’t fine
No matter how admired you are, your work won’t make you special