About 10 years ago, I almost married Mary Poppins.
She wasn’t an English nanny, but if Mary Poppins had a 21st century American counterpart, this would have been her.
She was brilliant and beautiful. She was full of confidence, but she was charming and diplomatic when she needed to be. She was funny, creative and intellectually curious. And maybe more than anything, she was remarkably competent.
She was the sort of person who you could send to fix any disastrous scene of chaos and failure, because she would organize everything, give orders to those who would take them, charm those who wouldn’t take orders — and bring success where disaster had loomed.
She didn’t care what anybody else thought. She was determined to do only what her conscience told her was right. And she fiercely and protectively loved children.
In almost every respect, she was my ideal woman. And she was crazy about me, too.

If you live by your principles, others won’t control your actions
If people say I intimidate them, what am I really doing wrong?
Looking for truth in random noise? Or is there meaning for me in this?
Financial crisis seems serious when it hits your own neighbors
THE McELROY ZOO: Meet Lucy, the dog who used to live on a chain
When did someone decide we have the legal right not to be offended?
Egypt trying to prove democracy means tyranny of the majority