Lori was laughing as she told me something her puppy had done. We were both on our way home after work Thursday afternoon. When I first called her, she was grumpy about the lousy week she’s had, but that changed after a few minutes. She was laughing and happy.
She suddenly sounded mildly annoyed and said she needed to take a phone call from her mother. Her mom had called five times since we had started talking, and that wasn’t like her.
About 20 minutes later, she texted me. She was in a daze. Her mother had been calling to say that her father has brain tumors.
When I called her back, she wasn’t the same happy young woman she had been. Her entire life had just been turned upside down. She still doesn’t know the details, but she’s leaving town first thing Friday morning to drive home — to deal with an uncertain future for the father she loves dearly.
And I’m sitting here thinking — again — just how uncertain our short lives really are.

The Alien Observer: I’m not going to change — and you’re not, either
Flawed bricks can build our lives, because perfection never arrives
Maybe we’re doomed to replay past until we finally get it right
Are government employee unions making the rest of us unsafe?
To save my own sanity, it’s time for me to shut up about Trump
Continued collapse of competence points toward decline of a culture
Sex is everywhere in our culture, but we’re starved for intimacy
My father’s death was proof that unhappiness quickly kills a man
Knowing right choice years later is useless without time machine