When I was a child, the days, weeks and months took forever to pass.
A day seemed to drag on. A week or a month seemed forever. The time from one Christmas to the next might as well have been a lifetime.
And then I got old enough to start thinking about my future self — the adult self who would conquer the world, make a fortune and be loved. I longingly looked forward to that day. I made childish plans. I had fantasy stories in which I was the beloved hero.
When I grew up, I would do all the things I yearned to do — and I would be happy in that distant tomorrow. The picture was crystal clear in my young mind.
Decades later, tomorrow has never come.
I’ve known people who live in the past, but I’ve known others who live in a perfect future that never comes. They think if some particular thing can happen, it will allow something else good to happen — and then they’ll be happy. Until then, everything is on hold.

THE McELROY ZOO: Meet Thomas, the aloof loner of my menagerie
Fear and shame can leave us in a fog that destroys relationships
You finally have to stop making excuses for people who hurt you
Serenity is seeing all sides of life, choosing to continue the journey
The Alien Observer: The blind are leading the blind
If you beg someone to make you his priority, you hurt yourself
Pop culture creates overgrown kids in adult bodies who won’t grow up
Anarchist vs. minarchist debate misses the shift to post-statist world