The instructor was leading the class through exercises designed to produce a set of individual goals and plans. It was Thursday morning and I was attending mandatory post-license training for new real estate agents in Birmingham.
“What do you want?” she said again. “Write it in a specific way. Do you want to be rookie of the year? Imagine yourself accepting that award. Do you want to hit a certain financial goal? Be specific.”
I started typing. I named a couple of goals. They seemed to be the sorts of things other people around me were excited about.
And then it hit me. I didn’t want the things I had just written down. I was in a group of about 20 people, most of whom seemed to want those things, so it was easy to fall into accepting their goals as obvious and right.

If you’re sure what’s important, everything else seems trivial
It might not matter who’s right; just fix the problem and move on
Today is surgery for me; I’ll give you news and be back when I can
Sometimes you’re not ready for a challenge, but you do it anyway
After chimp’s mother died, mama dog raised baby as one of her pups
‘Post-racial’ America? We’re nowhere close to that — and may never be
English teacher tells Wellesley grads: ‘You’re nothing special’ — not yet
FRIDAY FUNNIES