Let me introduce you to someone important in my life.
Her name is Claire.
She is calm, intelligent, reflective, warm without being loud, serious without being severe. She has an easy smile and the sort of presence that suggests both kindness and backbone. She seems like someone who reads books thoughtfully, listens carefully and notices things most people rush past.
There’s just one complication.
Claire is not real.
She isn’t a woman I met, dated or nearly married. She’s not waiting somewhere for our paths to cross at a dinner party or a bookstore or one of those improbably meaningful moments movies have taught us to expect.
Claire is a hypothesis.
A few days ago, I engaged in an unusual exercise: describing, with surprising precision, the kind of woman who would most likely be deeply compatible with me. Not a fantasy assembled from wishful thinking, but a probabilistic sketch shaped by temperament, values and the realities of long-term partnership.
The result was Claire.

FRIDAY FUNNIES
What did you want in childhood? Did you abandon those dreams?
Listening to our own inner voice can be the toughest thing we do
Some people hate their enemies so badly that fairness doesn’t matter
We often value a love only after we’ve carelessly thrown it away
NOTEBOOK: Get ready for the epic snoozer of Obama vs. Romney
Epiphany: Was it so bad that I used to work toward perfection?
Loss of cultural consensus means violent conflict in decades ahead