A friend sent me an unexpected note last week. He had observed me having a confrontation with a bully — and he had something to say about it.
“I wish I had your courage,” my friend’s note started. “I have wanted to tell [Bully] to ‘go to hell’ on more than one occasion, but I haven’t.”
This surprised me. I certainly hadn’t seen it as courage on my part. It just seemed like the obviously right thing to do. The bully was trying to be intimidating to me and to others — about something he knew nothing about — and I called him out on his behavior. I calmly pointed out his factual errors. When he doubled down on arrogance and bluster, I pointed out what he was doing and then moved on without allowing it to escalate.
As I’ve thought about my friend’s comment since then, it’s occurred to me that courage can be very different for different people. When I’m standing up for what I believe is right — or for people who I believe are being bullied or oppressed — it seems natural to speak up if I think I can help.
About other things, though, I’ve sometimes been a coward.

Peace won’t come until you quit obeying long-gone programmers
Maturity sees world’s ugliness with more melancholy than anger
Man who’s leaving infertile wife thinks world revolves around him
If you believe in these campaign fairy tales, welcome to Fantasy Island
Biases teach us what to expect, but we often turn out to be wrong
Eviction leaves me sifting through collateral damage of a broken life
End of life brought cancer patient to baptism six days before death
We all know fairy tales aren’t true, but maybe we need such illusions