I can’t possibly tell you why I fell in love with Gail when we were freshmen in college.
That’s not a negative reflection on her. To the contrary, I have only good things to say about her. But I’ve changed so much since I fell in love with her that I can’t put myself into that emotional place. I’m still the same person I was then, but I barely understood myself, much less how two adults should love each other.
I was emotionally and psychologically immature.
Gail was my reflection of the ideal woman at the time. We had gone to high school together. We had spent time in church together after her widowed mother married someone in my church. She was bright, well-spoken, confident, creative, ambitious and attractive. I considered myself very fortunate.
I’ve been thinking lately about what our choice of romantic partners says about us — and I can’t help but think that our partner choices change over the years in ways that reflect who we are becoming and the ways that we allow those people to influence us.
When we move on to other partners, it’s often simply because we are no longer the same people we were when we chose that person — for good or for bad.

Memo to Republicans: Your serious contenders are hypocrites, too
Was I ‘fat’? ‘Lazy’? My father’s ugly words made me feel shame
Ignore the happy face it presents: Coercive state points a gun at you
Autumn scents send subtle signals every year that it’s time for change
Existential crisis makes me ask: Can I ever trust you to love me?
Laughing at the ‘rapture cult’? Those who believe in the state are no different
We’re more like other animals than we like to admit to anyone
Partisans defend every kind of evil when it’s done by their own allies