The dreams of my youth are all dead. One by one, they slipped away until I’d lost everything I once thought was important.
I wanted power and glory. I was completely certain that I would become president of the United States. There was surely some ego involved. And a desire to prove my self-worth. But I wanted to do great things. I really wanted to lead the people. I wanted to show the way to our Promised Land.
I wanted success and wealth. I had a passionate desire to build a newspaper empire. In the days of my youth, newspapers were still the most serious of the news media. The most respected. They were also wildly profitable. I wanted to build the biggest newspaper company in the country.
There were others, but those were my two dominating dreams. They meant everything to me. And yet they slowly died. I’ve talked with you before about some of the reasons why. I held onto them for as long as I could. Longer than I should have, really.
But I understand now. No matter how much we want something — or even someone — the time comes when holding on to a dead dream stops us from accepting something better.

A year after first seeing doctor about cancer, how much have I learned?
FRIDAY FUNNIES
The egalitarian lie: Every group has leaders, even Occupy Wall Street
Far-left political idiocy is ruining remake of Disney’s ‘Snow White’
Don’t show me the past or the future; show me what you can give now
‘Curing’ unpopular beliefs through psychiatry is throwback to ugly past
The Alien Observer: Craving predictability in a world gone mad
Love drives us mad, but madness rescues us from ‘horrible sanity’