Cheslie Kryst lived the kind of life that most people can only dream about.
She was a 30-year-old attorney — who held an MBA, too — and she lived in a fancy New York City apartment. Just a couple of years ago, she won the Miss USA pageant. She was followed by more than a quarter of a million people on Instagram. In addition to her law practice, she was also a correspondent for an entertainment news site. She lived a life of glamour that millions of young women envy.
Despite all that, Kryst killed herself Sunday morning. She jumped from the 29th-floor terrace of her Manhattan apartment building.
I have no idea why Kryst wanted to die and I have no judgment about her life or death. But the news of her suicide immediately brought my mind back to a lesson I learned through a 19th century poem when I was in the sixth grade.

Pursuing transcendent meaning is rebellion against modern culture
Apple podcast listing means you can now subscribe to Love & Hope
Overconfidence in financial models will lead to ruin in coming collapse
Politicians, empires come and go; only love and nature will endure
I can’t find the balance between expecting too much and too little
If you need vacation from spouse, maybe you married wrong person
The biggest question a human faces is how to live a good life
FRIDAY FUNNIES
My bad teen poetry suggests I’ve always hungered for missing love