The woman was tall and strikingly beautiful. There was something about her that made her stand out in a loud restaurant that was packed almost shoulder to shoulder late Friday night. Then she turned her face toward me.
I gasped, at least inwardly. Was that her? It was her, but it couldn’t be. The restaurant was so loud and packed that nobody could have heard me, but I felt my lips move involuntarily.
“Are you proud of me?” I whispered.
For a brief moment, our eyes met. She was beautiful. She had a powerful presence. But it wasn’t her.
She was leaving through one door and I was heading out the door on the other side of the place. Then she was gone and I was in my car. I put the key into the ignition, but I didn’t start the car. I just sat there thinking about what had just happened.
I had thought for a moment that she was someone who I once loved. I was mistaken, but just thinking it was her made me realize — because of the question I blurted out — that I still want her to be proud of me. Even after all these years.

Roy Moore just the latest in the long line of politicians who want control
FRIDAY FUNNIES
‘Vast military-industrial complex’ keeps growing and keeps killing
Tradeoffs about values leave me feeling like ‘double-minded man’
We’re all prisoners of a culture which demands that we conform
We forget how to be happy, but children and animals remember
I’ve now launched a new podcast about search for love and family
If you knew when you would die, would that affect how you lived?