We spend much of our lives hiding from each other — and then we wonder why nobody knows us.
We grow up in a culture that teaches us to project just the right image. If we wear the right clothes, drive the right car, live in the right house and have the right job, we will finally be accepted. We can stay inside our suit of armor but still have people see how perfect our facade looks.
But when we do that, we still feel empty and alone. So we harden ourselves and try to prevent feeling anything. If we’ll just double down on success and looking great, we will finally be enough one day. That’s what we hope.
Authenticity is rare today. So when we find someone who feels like the “real deal,” we’re drawn to him or her, even if we can’t quite understand why.
We are so accustomed to seeing facades — shells that protect fragile hearts that have been repressed — that we are shocked when someone is authentic and expresses truth in a way that makes a voice inside us say, “I thought I was the only one who felt that way!”

THE McELROY ZOO: Meet Munchkin, the dog who vanished without a trace
We often don’t see who loves us until it’s too late to be an option
Few things scare humans like the prospect of living, dying alone
Fixing what’s broken inside often makes things worse until rebirth
Kitten outsmarted me for weeks, but Alex finally joined our family
New segregation: Why do some people cling to racial politics?
Ron Paul asks 31 tough questions that our politicians won’t answer