She never really goes away, but she’s also never really there. Like a ghost from another life — a life which I once lived with her — she haunts my dreams and intrudes on my waking hours.
It’s not convenient to live with a ghost from the past. My conscious mind has buried her over and over again. But just when I start thinking I’ve won the long struggle to put her behind me, I remember she’s still in this world. And it all comes flooding back.
Her face. Her eyes. Her voice. Her words. Her habits and her thoughts. Her goodness and her fatal flaws. And then I can’t stop the tidal wave of emotions. It exhausts me, because I’m left with nothing but unanswered questions.
As I walked down an aisle of a grocery store late Saturday night, I suddenly heard something in my heart ask, “Do you still miss me? I still miss you.”
And I felt her presence. She was there. But she was there as a shimmering ghost from the past, not as a real woman who could love me or answer my questions.

It’s easy to learn wrong lessons from watching parent’s behavior
Ghost of Richard M. Nixon haunts Obama administration’s IRS fiasco
Man’s unconscious night after stroke leaves me uneasy about living alone
Words of appreciation can have power to connect us and heal us
Can’t we all get along? Why is the liberty movement so fragmented?
People who invoke ‘fairness’ generally just mean, ‘Do things my way — or else’
Genuine love is always extreme — and it rarely makes any sense