I was just getting home Saturday night when the phone rang. I didn’t know the number, so I almost didn’t answer.
A woman identified herself, but the name meant nothing to me. She told me I might not remember her, but she said we used to talk at a restaurant where I used to go — a place that shut down last year. She was an employee there and she used to come sit and talk when things were slow.
After she reminded me, I did remember her, but I never would have recalled her name. I haven’t seen her for a couple of years and I doubt she’s crossed my mind since then. I was confused about why she was calling and how she even found me.
She explained that I had once given her my business card — which had my name and number — and she had somehow saved it. Then she sounded nervous, as though she wasn’t quite sure what to say.
“You saved my life,” she finally said. “I just wanted to thank you for that.”

Why do we often attract the folks who are most destructive for us?
New segregation: Why do some people cling to racial politics?
Bernanke’s ‘helicopter drop’ gave $1.2 trillion to Wall Street banks
What’s this site all about?
Some people hate their enemies so badly that fairness doesn’t matter
We repeat what we fail to repair, so I keep re-learning old lessons
Goodbye, William (1999-2015)
Noise of culture isn’t evil, but it drowns out what really matters
They’re just images of past love, but I can’t make them go away