I no longer recognize the person I was when I was 25 years old.
I don’t quite know who I was. I was managing editor of a small daily newspaper. I was good at my job. I was brash. Ambitious. Arrogant. I knew it all. I was going to change the world.
And that precocious and baby-faced man was married, too.
I rarely mention having been married back then, although I wrote about it here a couple of years ago. In fact, I rarely think about it. That’s a part of my life that feels completely foreign to me now. It’s almost as though it never happened.
Even though she and I have been divorced for years now, I still have the highest regard for the woman I married back then. We still have friendly correspondence every now and then. I’m very happy that she married a man who seems perfect for her. They have a fine son and they’re both college journalism professors.
When we married, I thought she was my soulmate. I thought our marriage was for life. So what happened? Was I wrong to think we were soulmates? Or was it something else?

A year later, my father’s death looms large, but I have no regrets
Existential crisis makes me ask: Can I ever trust you to love me?
This is why people are confused about what anarchists really are
Without meaning, most are blind to rot destroying their own lives
Bernanke’s ‘helicopter drop’ gave $1.2 trillion to Wall Street banks
Desperate need to be special drives me to try to matter to those I love
Major parties compete to see who can tell the biggest lie about jobs
Love & Hope — Episode 6: