When I look into a mirror, I sometimes wonder who’s staring back at me. I especially feel that way tonight.
This is what I look like tonight. I just got home. I’m exhausted. I’m sure I look tired. After I fed Lucy and the cats, I put my iPhone in front of my face to snap this photo. I wanted to see if I look as tired as I feel. And I think I do.
At first, I couldn’t figure out why I’m feeling so negative. Being tired isn’t anything unusual, but this feels different. I feel more like someone who’s been stuck at an airport for years waiting to catch a flight — and I’m always disappointed that it hasn’t arrived.
I started thinking about what a friend told me today. He just found out that he has to have some major surgery in a couple of weeks. If he doesn’t fix the serious problem doctors have found, he would very likely die within a few years. Plenty of people have surgery — and face life-threatening problems — every day. But my friend is the same age I am. Maybe that’s why this feels different.
It’s not that I feel old. I just feel stuck. I’m waiting and waiting for my life to begin. But I’ve lost my way. I’ve never felt so alone. And there’s a part of me which fears this will never change.

Why do Birmingham taxpayers give $500,000 yearly to college sports?
Nobody’s perfect as a mate, but Mary Poppins was pretty close
Why do so many of us stay where we know we’ll remain miserable?
How did memory get it wrong? Why did I edit truth about her?
Shared misery: Nobody can have air conditioning unless everyone can
Union rules protect pepper-spraying cop from the firing he deserves
‘What are we Christians to do?’ Jesus has already answered that
THE McELROY ZOO: Meet Oliver, the furball who taught me to love cats
What’s at the root of objections to real freedom? Paternalism