“What’s the most important thing you’ve learned about life so far?”
The question was deceptively simple, but I wanted to give a useful answer. A high school student told me his teacher had assigned him to ask this question to 10 random adults — outside his family — and then write about what they said.
There’s so much I could say to that question, because I’ve learned so much. I constantly feel as though I have to throw out at least half of what I’ve learned and start over, because I keep finding flaws in beliefs I used to accept as obvious. Much of what I write here is an attempt to chronicle what I’m learning and discarding as I change. What could I possibly say now to this teen?
“Love and beauty,” I finally said after I thought about it for a long minute.
As soon as the words left my mouth, I knew this was going to be hard to explain. The teen looked confused. So I tried again.

Egypt trying to prove democracy means tyranny of the majority
When voters insist on lies, politicians follow their incentives and lie
Documents force me to rethink some old beliefs about my father
I don’t understand YouTube fame, but I’m drawn toward it anyway
Trying to force others to be like us destroys loving relationships
If you want to win a chess match, you have to play chess, not lecture the other players
Good character matters far more than winning political arguments