It felt as though my heart was going to explode with joy.
She loved me. She told me she loved me. I had already fallen in love with her, but I was terrified that maybe she might not love me in return. And then came those magical words.
“I love you, David.”
As long as she loved me, nothing else mattered. We could overcome any problem. I could climb any mountain that our relationship required me to climb. I could be whatever I needed to be. The world changed in that moment — all because she loved me.
We loved each other deeply. We said the words — both aloud and in writing — all the time. (What you see above is a screenshot of her very own keystrokes from an email I still have. I still have all of them.) We expressed the feelings to one another in ways that made the world seem alive and magical. The world was bright and loving and perfect, all because she loved me and I loved her.
Until everything changed. My heart was broken and bruised. So was hers. But why?

Old photos have me thinking about who I was then, how far I’ve come
What if Jesus was serious about all those things He told His followers?
Murdered family cat in Arkansas is latest victim of partisan political hate
When doubt awakens me at dawn, my world can seem a lonely place
What’s so important to you that you’d like to take it to your grave?
Financial crisis seems serious when it hits your own neighbors
God may be working on what we need long before we can see it
Is ‘majority rule’ moral even when the majority don’t want freedom?
Why did we slowly let them strip our neighborhoods of most trees?