It was after midnight when someone tagged me on Facebook. I checked to see what it was.
“Came across this going through some old photos from about 5 years ago,” this person wrote as his caption next to big words on a picture. “Words of wisdom from David McElroy.”
I don’t remember writing the words, but it sounds like my voice, so I’m sure I did. As I read the words, I agreed with them, but I found myself painfully aware that I haven’t always lived up to them.
“You can’t force someone to believe you are worth making a priority,” I wrote, apparently about five years ago. “If you try, you will end up bitter, hurt and angry. If a person doesn’t value you enough to make you a priority, it doesn’t matter what he or she says — even if the words are, ’I love you.’ Love is lived out through priorities and actions, not words and wishes. If you wait and beg to become someone’s priority, you’re not showing how much you love someone else. You’re showing how little you value yourself.”
I remember what it feels like to be a woman’s priority.

How do we know when to quit? Persistence may be futile choice
Openly gay people in U.S. military? So what? I have no objections
Our life choices dictate who will be there when it’s our time to die
Intellectual honesty mostly dead — but few partisans even care
All humans are a little bit insane; we’re not as rational as we think
Random stats after five months
We can’t defeat existing system; we must build better one instead
Kids’ willingness to blindly obey shows in Quebec teacher’s joke
After years of silence, it’s time to tell the truth about my father