You can get to know a stranger pretty well in six hours — but can you come away knowing yourself better? Maybe. This long night makes me think so.
It was a chance encounter. We were both strangers looking for something — maybe neither of us knew what — when we found each other Saturday night. I was restless and needed to get away from my house. She was frustrated with the people at her house and was escaping them.
It was around 10 p.m. when I got to Whataburger in Trussville. I picked it because it was open all night and because I seem to keep being drawn back there lately, since it’s a place where I used to go all the time. She walked in with a self-assurance that suggested she would own any room she walked into. The place was mostly empty and it wasn’t long before we were chatting, first across a couple of tables and then across my old booth as she joined me there.
Her name is Delaney. She’s a tall blonde woman with blue eyes and she looks as though she would have been at home as a hippie in the ’60s. Some of that was the way she dressed but part of it was the way she carried herself — as though she sees right through everybody and says things others are too polite to say.

We’re trapped in our own heads, fearful of other folks’ judgment
People who invoke ‘fairness’ generally just mean, ‘Do things my way — or else’
Love & Hope — Episode 10:
If you need vacation from spouse, maybe you married wrong person
Problem for schools: ‘stop students from becoming this advanced’
How do renegade ‘weird ideas’ grow and spread to win acceptance?
For an American church, the Fourth of July should be just another day
Kind words can make difference for stressed parents at Christmas
KKK-loving newspaper owner has always been a nut; this isn’t news