I didn’t get to sleep Friday night until the sun was coming up Saturday morning around 6:30 a.m.
I’m not quite sure what I was doing all night, but this has become a pattern for me lately. I spent some of the time reading. I watched a movie. And I spent quite awhile at this little gazebo about half a mile from my house. It’s at the center of the little downtown area of the suburb where I live. While the rest of the city is asleep, it’s a good place for me to write.
I’m back there again Saturday night, but it’s hard to be sure why I’m here. I feel the need to write, but I also feel a creeping frustration that doesn’t have a name. Part of me wants to hide and be alone, and another part of me wants to desperately reach out to someone. I feel so conflicted — like someone who is screaming like a mad man on the inside but looks perfectly calm on the outside.
I feel as though I’ve lost control over my life — and these late-night times of solitude seem to be the only times when things make any sense.

Authentic identity gets lost when everything becomes performance
Angry and bitter people often misunderstand one another
Playing it safe isn’t good enough; I have to do things that might fail
Irony: Libyan rebels now rounding up blacks, sticking them into jails
‘This path leads to somewhere I think I can finally say, I’m home’
Can we find ways to separate love of home from worship of government?
What if we had a birthday party for the USA — and nobody came?