There are times when the most liberating thing you can do is to give up.
I keep deceiving myself. I tell myself that I’m finished trying to “save” others. I know it’s a waste of time and emotional energy to keep trying to save people who don’t want to be saved. People who don’t believe they need to be saved.
It’s ridiculous. It’s even arrogant of me. And it’s exhausting.
But I keep slipping back into the habit anyway, and I feel like a fool. I find that I’m not saving anyone — and I’m destroying myself by giving myself false hope that change might be coming. The truth is that change isn’t coming. Nobody is going to listen. And I need to save myself — instead of trying to become a hero by saving someone else.
When I look at reality, I see so much which is going to hurt people — some who I’ve loved, some who I’ll never know — and I want to scream in frustration that what I see isn’t obvious to those others. I was once naive enough to believe that if I just explained carefully why people were putting themselves at risk, they would eagerly make changes in their own lives.
What I find is that many people will admit — in the abstract — that they badly need change, but then they’re unwilling to do anything about it once they realize there’s a price to be paid.

What if most money spent for university degrees is useless?
THE McELROY ZOO: Meet Bessie, the beautiful girl who’s still scared
Social media creates shallow ties at expense of deeper connections
If you’ve gotten on the wrong bus, nothing changes until you get off
Who’s afraid of a federal shutdown? Many of us hope for the real thing
Law profs: the Constitution means whatever we say it means
Despite promise of new tech, today’s journalism is just trivia
Love & Hope — Episode 13:
The plan sounded fair at the time, but why did I pay for everything?