I’ve spent most of my life learning to let go of the things I thought were important.
My father almost turned me into a narcissist. Just like him. I didn’t know that, of course. He didn’t know that, either. I didn’t understand he was a narcissist, because I didn’t even know what clinical narcissism was. It never would have occurred to me, because my father — the god-like central figure of my childhood — was my standard for all that was right and normal.
I’ve spent my adult life on a long journey of recovery. It started while I was still in my late 20s when I vaguely realized something was wrong. That led to the realization that I had come from a very dysfunctional family. But I still had so many layers of dysfunction to take apart — and I had so much to learn in order to become an emotionally healthy adult.
Even now, I keep finding more habits to unlearn. I keep realizing that I have beliefs that need to change. But as I take apart the old pieces of ugly dysfunction — brick by brick — I slowly replace them with something better.
I’m slowly becoming an emotionally healthy man.

Faith is our only assurance that rebirth will come again in spring
Time and maturity have changed
We who believe life has meaning have lost war for modern culture
It’s when we create art — and create a better world — that we’re most like our Creator
As sowing comes before reaping, culture comes before politics
Nature struggles to keep alive
‘Hey, do you already have a wife? My mom doesn’t have a husband’
Almost all of us feel alienation if we don’t find a place to call home
My bad teen poetry suggests I’ve always hungered for missing love