I don’t know where the woman and the little girl in the image come from. I don’t know where that train station is. I don’t know whether I’m coming or going. I just know the picture is burned vividly into my brain like a still frame from an old Technicolor movie.
It’s an image which has haunted my dreams for years, but I’ve never experienced the scene in real life. I’ve never been to this place. The girl and the woman both have blonde hair. One has a red coat, because it’s cold outside. The other coat is gray or black. The trains lining the platform are pulled by steam engines, so there’s the sound of hissing pressure lines and the air is heavy with the mist of steam.
Much of the picture is fuzzy. I’m meeting the woman and the girl at the train station. Who are they? Are they arriving? Or have they come to greet me as I arrive? I can’t quite tell. I know it’s my wife and daughter, but the image is like a dream that dangles something in front of me and never quite resolves itself.

My teen hijinks were silly fun, not alcohol-fueled drunken groping
Galt’s Gulch? I can live without that, but I need my own ‘Akston’s diner’
Few people want to admit it, but our society rewards conformity
After years of wasting my life, sands of time are slipping away
Republicans edge closer to inevitable choice of Romney to face Obama
Ellie Kemper ‘witch-hunt’ shows why it’s hard to fight real racism
I thought I saw her face — and I whispered, ‘Are you proud of me?’
Being treated with respect changed black teen’s racial beliefs in 1974
Do political labels make things clear or just confuse everyone?