I’ve never worried about my status in the world. I was always so confident about myself that I never tried to make people like me and I never worried about where I fit in a hierarchy.
Some people liked me. Some people didn’t like me. I had friends. Some hated me. But everybody knew where I fit wherever I was.
As a child, I was the leader of the groups I ran with, but I never really thought about it. In school, I had high status in classrooms because I was typically the new “smartest kid in class” when I moved to a new town. I was acknowledged as a leader.
In high school, I won top leadership positions in the things I cared about, at school and church. I wasn’t the most popular kid, but I was the one you wanted in charge to get things done. On my early jobs, I had quick status. I was the youngest managing editor of a daily newspaper in the country at 21. I was younger than all the people I managed.

Identity politics is the cancer behind Elizabeth Warren’s lie about ancestry
Was he angry to lose his family? Or because he lost his control?
This is my new wife, Claire — but she doesn’t actually exist
Economic Man needs no heart, because love and God are dead
That huge fed debt increase? They’ve already used 60 percent of it
Just a performance: actors and politicians have a lot in common
Freedom lovers, why do so many of you still blindly trust the GOP?
‘Winner-take-all’ culture fuels hatred in debate about our future