The most lost people are those who don’t know they need to be rescued.
Needing others is discouraged in our culture. We get the message that we need to be tough — that we need to hide our wounds and fears and doubts. We’re told to put on a brave face. We’re told not to cry. We learn not to show our feelings. We learn to hide our vulnerability.
Mostly, we’re taught not to need anyone, because that’s a sign of weakness. In extreme versions, we even have labels such as “co-dependency.” It’s a psychological dysfunction. And that helps us justify our practice of numbing ourselves to our feelings in order to shut others out.
But what if we are designed to need each other? What if our nature means that every single one of us has deep needs and scars and vulnerabilities? What if we all need mutual rescue — a relationship where we can rescue each other?
I’m thinking about that today because of what a friend posted about his wife. She died today — and he’s grieving for the woman who rescued him.

NOTEBOOK: If results confuse Paul’s aides, how competent are they?
Pursuing transcendent meaning is rebellion against modern culture
Delusional Democrats help Trump re-election by chasing phantoms
Here’s the jobs growth Obama promised—in federal workers
Now that his wife is gone for good, man is left with memories and love
Painful longing is too powerful to express heart’s anguish in words
If you play the DC power game, all that matters is the game
Anarchist vs. minarchist debate misses the shift to post-statist world