When I was a teen-ager, I used to write my own stories. It actually started when I was young child, but I didn’t write them down until I was a teen. As I went to sleep each night when I was small, I would lie in bed and make up stories. I was always the hero. As I got a little bit older, the hero would have a different name, but he was really still me.
In one of my stories — when I was about 14 years old — I was one of a group of teen-agers who went to Cape Canaveral and toured a real space shuttle on the launch pad. For some reason, the shuttle was ready for launch and they let a group of teens — about five or six of us — alone to tour the ship. Something terrible happened in the country at exactly that moment and we had to take off in the shuttle. It turned out to be armed with weapons. I was the captain, of course. I brilliantly guided my little band of kids to go blow up some bad guys and save the country.
What I didn’t know at the time is that my immature teen fantasy would one day be roughly the concept behind a reboot of the Star Trek franchise.

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Idiots in Congress haven’t heard of ‘law of unintended consequences’
I hate the intense pain, but I don’t know how to live without longing
‘Black vs. white’ thinking causes confusion without shades of gray
Not voting makes a statement: ‘You don’t have my moral consent’
My unconscious choices on love say much about women and me
For some of us, loss of trust is a deep existential threat to heart
My drive to be perfect led to lack of compassion for self and others