A man pulled up in a white SUV and got out at a fresh grave. There was a funeral tent that covered both the grave and the collection of flowers that were obviously new.
The man didn’t look at me and didn’t seem to pay attention to anything else. His suit was what we might have once called his “Sunday best.” He looked somber and his only thoughts seemed to focus on a hole in the dirt where a loved one had been placed to rest today.
All of as sudden, I felt as though I was intruding just by being in the cemetery. I was there to take sunset photos, but this stark hill suddenly seemed more like a sanctuary or at least sacred ground.
I was about a hundred feet from the man and I remained quiet and still. After he stood next to the grave for a few minutes, he got back into his SUV and slowly drove off. As I stood there in the stillness — as it got darker and darker — I found myself disturbed that I had no idea whose body had been laid to rest in that hole.
And that felt completely wrong.

Existential crisis makes me ask: Can I ever trust you to love me?
Lesson for McCain’s ’08 voters: The lesser of two evils is still evil
Do great dreams really come true or do they just serve to haunt us?
Love’s closest counterfeit sounds like love but acts like selfish need
If ‘bigots’ can lose their rights, will your rights be next to go?
What if our craving for dopamine drives our desires and addictions?
You’ve been lied to: Freedom and democracy are different things