A young lesbian who I casually know paid me a high compliment today.
“If I were to ever go straight again,“ she said, “it would be for a man like you.”
Liz is married — to a woman — and I have no expectation that she’s looking to start a relationship with me. I laughed at the unexpected comment and asked her why.
“You listen when I talk,“ she said. “And when you listen to me, you ‘get’ what I’m saying. You don’t look at me like you’re not even listening or you didn’t understand. You don’t even know me that well, but you ‘get’ me better than any man I ever dated. And that’s what I always wanted from a man. I wanted to be heard and understood.”
I think Liz is perfectly normal in her craving to be understood. The fact that she’s felt so little understanding from the men in her life is an indictment of our culture. We’re surrounded by more people than ever. We have technology that allegedly connects us more than ever.
But many of us have ever felt as alone as we do today.

Totalitarians want to seize your cash as the moral rot continues
If there are exceptions to free speech, it’s not really free speech, is it?
Slow death of painful past leaves me trapped in fog of depression
How miserable does someone have to be to ‘troll’ a cute dog picture?
Just a performance: actors and politicians have a lot in common
Without peaceful breakup plan, U.S. faces violent, angry collapse
Fetish for privatizing misses point; it’s having a choice that matters
Sometimes you’re not ready for a challenge, but you do it anyway
FRIDAY FUNNIES