Maybe I’ve always wanted to be needed. I’m not sure. I just know I wasn’t aware of it until the last few years.
For the past two days, I’ve been stuck on this idea of being needed. Almost three years ago, I wrote about how the best relationships are centered around mutual need and “mutual rescue.”
But this thing that’s been nagging at me is different. It left me feeling down, because it emphasized how much I miss being needed. Feeling that made it hard to make it through work Friday, because I was feeling lost — as though I no longer had any direction or motivation.
On the way home Friday evening, I snapped this photo of myself in the car. I had spent the day pretending to care what others had to say — talking to them about the expensive house we were looking at — and I knew that my fake smile had been pasted on too long.
As I drove home, I realized how little I cared about any of it. None of it mattered to me. What was the point without feeling needed by a family who I loved?

THE McELROY ZOO: Meet Bessie, the beautiful girl who’s still scared
Silly controversy over Cadillac ad reminds us we want different things
Tribal instincts cause us to see others as evil, when they’re just different
Meet Charlotte, one of the important women in my life
Defense mechanism led me to repress unacceptable emotions
Socialists miss simple truth that serving others will create wealth
Emptiness can bring panic that feels like being stalked by fear
Rush Limbaugh is just as partisan and ignorant as MSNBC’s Ed Schultz
People with healthy self-esteem don’t fear what others might see