I knew Laura had a 6-year-old daughter, but I didn’t know the details. At dinner tonight, she told me her story.
“I never had any emotional connection with her father,” she said. “He’s a decent man and he tries to be in her life, but there was never any feeling between us. I was always just desperate for attention from a man — so I kept getting it however I could.”
Laura is 28 now. She’s a strikingly attractive blue-eyed blonde with a successful career in management. But she admitted to me tonight that she has always tried to find something that was missing from her life.
“When I was little, my daddy told me that I was a mistake,” she said. “I was an accident. They didn’t want me. My mom admitted it was true, but it mostly affected me with my dad, especially since he had another ‘accident’ a year after me with another woman. I craved his attention and couldn’t get enough to make me feel like I was loved. So when teen-age boys started wanting me, that was my way to feel loved. I kept looking for more and more — but I never found what I was looking for.”
I’ve been thinking a lot lately about my own pursuit of “more.” Laura’s ways of pursuing something more was different than my ways have been, but our motivations haven’t been so different — and this is more common in our society than any of us like to believe.

FRIDAY FUNNIES
Life has a brutal habit of forcing us to confront our own hypocrisy
Did GOP and Democrats get their scripts mixed up this time?
Listen to Samuel’s ancient warning to Israel about anointing a ruler: ‘…you shall be his slaves’
AUDIO: Drama of ‘family of origin’ seems to follow us for a lifetime
Knowing right choice years later is useless without time machine
Nightmarish dreams mean dead can continue to play mind games
Will rising anger about personal economic pain lead to trouble soon?
Voting Rights Act oversight rules should reflect today, not the past