I have trouble starting over. It doesn’t matter whether it’s a game, a business venture, a relationship or a job. If I find things going poorly, I want to walk away. I feel humiliated. I want to quit.
Starting over would be an admission of failure, that I hadn’t been good enough. It’s easier to just move on to something new, because I’m uncomfortable with the messiness of fixing something that’s gone wrong.
When I was a student at the University of Alabama, I had been dating a bright and beautiful nursing student for a few months. Then we had a disagreement about something. It was minor — and I don’t recall the details — but we stopped talking. I wanted to continue the relationship, but I wasn’t willing to go to her and say, “How can we work this out?”
I didn’t see this woman for several years. I had moved on and married someone else. Then I was in Tuscaloosa one day and ran into her. We talked about what had happened.
“I knew I was wrong,” she told me, “but I didn’t know how to admit that and reconcile things with you. I kept hoping you would call me again and we could start over, but since you didn’t, I figured you didn’t care and I gave up on us.”
I learned the truth too late. We had both wanted to reconcile, but neither one of us knew how to open the door and then start over.

Replacing Obama with a Republican president won’t change anything
Watching a friend’s happy family makes me feel pangs of jealousy
Plans change and people hurt us, but we often need to start over
Overconfidence in financial models will lead to ruin in coming collapse
Looking for truth in random noise? Or is there meaning for me in this?
Flawed bricks can build our lives, because perfection never arrives
What if emotional baggage we carry isn’t really our core issue?
Memo to politicians: Coercion isn’t the same thing as ‘investment’