
When there’s unexpected tragedy in the world, I always know what to expect from myself. My first instinct is to call someone I love and say, “Are you OK? Are you safe?”
It’s a very instinctive and irrational desire to reach out to try to protect someone who couldn’t possibly have been threatened by a shooting in Las Vegas today. It’s just so instinctive that it takes time for my conscious rational brain to kick in and remind me, “The people you love aren’t in danger, so you can relax.”
The many centuries of human history seem to have wired us in this way. When there is a danger — to ourselves or others — the first thing we’re programmed to do is think of the people we love and to think about how to protect them.
When something terrible happens, who do you think of first? Who do you want to tell about news in your life? Who do you want to protect? Your complicated answers to those questions will tell you who you really love — because your instincts tell you the truth.
We will destroy ourselves if we don’t learn to love our enemies
Home is just a dream that some among us are still searching for
Just because you have right to be rude doesn’t mean it’s justified
Do we really need so much ‘stuff’? Do we own it? Or does it own us?
Dead things must be cleared away before rebirth has chance to come
My father’s embezzling started and ended my media company
‘This path leads to somewhere I think I can finally say, I’m home’
GOP hypocrisy: It’s only ‘pork’ when federal spending is in other districts
Like an alien, I move through a world I can see but never touch