When I first saw Beth Wednesday, she looked like a woman who had just won the lottery. She was grinning from ear to ear and looked as though she might start bouncing off of walls at any moment.
“I passed! I passed! I made it!” she told me, as though she assumed I knew what that meant.
I was in an office on a college campus and Beth had just come out of a computer lab where she had checked her final grades for the semester. She had passed all of her finals and she had excellent grades. She had successfully completed her first semester of nursing school.
She explained all this to me and told me that she was so excited that she had to tell someone — and I was the first random stranger she saw. It made me happy to see her so jubilant, so I asked her to step in and tell me more.
Beth is about 40. On this day, she seemed on top of the world. But she kept telling me that she had been afraid she would “blow it.” I kidded her about whether she has a history of negative self-talk.
“Have you been talking to my therapist?” she asked jokingly. “Seriously, that’s what she’s always telling me, that I’m always expecting the worst and saying bad things to myself, but that’s the way it’s felt since my husband left in the middle of the semester.”
All of a sudden, this happy story sounded much more interesting to me — and more complicated.

Why are we uncomfortable when other people aren’t much like us?
Regain your sanity by focusing only on things you can control
Pretty much everyone shrugs at my most life-changing discovery
How does a father overcome his own issues to raise a new baby?
Door in my dream keeps trying to take me to the life I’ve needed
Penn & Teller: ‘Carny trash’ who became stars with original art
She took an easy way to escape risk, but she’s left to deal with empty life
What if we’re more talented than our inner fears allow us to admit?