“I’m really messed up, aren’t I?”
As my friend said these words to me, her big blue eyes looked at me searchingly. It felt as though half of her needed me to confirm this terrible thing she knew, but the other half needed me to tell her she was really OK.
Laura had just spent the last half hour confessing her sins and trying to understand why she was doing things she didn’t consciously want to do. She was confused. She was angry with herself. And she was hurting.
She has a boyfriend who she assures me is wonderful. (I haven’t met him, so I can’t say.) He’s perfect in every way, she says, both as a man and as someone who she would hope to marry. She admits that he doesn’t understand her (and never will) and that he makes her uncomfortable at times, but he still checks all the “husband material” check boxes in her mind.
What she doesn’t understand is why she’s pushing him away — and she doesn’t understand why she cheated on him.

Psychiatrist’s insight might be link between spiritual, material worlds
Modern obsession with ‘hot girls’ teaches everybody to be shallow
Ignorant economic reporting doesn’t help an equally ignorant public
Colorado high school student quits choir over Islamic worship song
We’re all broken, but some of us find meaning in broken partners
Nature made me like my mother, but my father tried to erase that
Since I’ve lost status I once had, it’s a shock to see I want it back
Shouldn’t standards be higher for those trusted to enforce our laws?
The Alien Observer: I’m not going to change — and you’re not, either