I was getting married seven years ago today, but I backed out.
I’ve written before about the choice I faced at the time when two women wanted to marry me. I was torn about what to do, because any decision I made was going to hurt someone badly. I ended up making the worst possible decision. I lost both of the women — and hurt all three of us.
As I get to the date that would have been my seventh wedding anniversary, I find myself thinking about that decision again. And I wonder what good it does me to know what I should have done — since I have no way of going back to 2008 to share my current knowledge and wisdom with my younger self.
The memories of the weekend during when I decided whether to go through with the planned wedding will always be strongly burned into my mind. I was spending the weekend alone in order to make the decision. The woman who I intended to marry was waiting for my decision, as was the other woman, who desperately hoped I would choose her instead.
From the place where I sit today, it’s an easy decision. I could lay out the facts for almost anyone and it would seem clear. But I was so wrapped up at the time in fear that was born of deeply rooted emotional dysfunction that I couldn’t see that.

I haven’t learned to stop walking on eggshells around angry people
A haunting question: ‘Where is love now, out here in the dark?’
The more I understand humans, the less I believe we’ll ever all get along
I’m the common denominator in all of my failed relationships
News used to be important; now it’s well-dressed entertainment
How would you live differently if you knew when death was coming?
If our assumptions don’t match, we can clash with best intentions
Italy sending seismologists to jail for failing to predict big earthquake