I was still 14 years old when I wrote the letter, but I sound older than that. How many ninth graders sit down and type a long and serious letter to an unknown future spouse?
The letter is an attempt to explain myself and where I came from to this future wife. It tried to explain how my confusing childhood had made me feel different from others — and I found myself assuming that the only sort of woman who could fit me was someone who could understand that.
“I figure you will have to be someone who has [been] hurt and been lonely just like me for you to understand,” I wrote.
Most of the letter is happier. It’s filled with joy at the prospect of finding someone who‘s enough like me — and shares enough values — for me to love. It describes in very clear terms what I want our marriage to be like.
I went though a box of unexplored things Tuesday night and found a number of interesting artifacts from the past, but two of them are on my mind tonight. One is this letter and the other is a handwritten application to a private school which asked what goals I had set for my adult life.

Stop using children as pawns to promote adult political agendas
Race discrimination: Sometimes evil, but sometimes praiseworthy?
Obsession with partisan hatred diverts you from economic truth
Online exposure doesn’t bug Lucy, but humans require some privacy
Happiness and success elude me unless I’m doing something I love
We can’t defeat the existing system; we must build a better one instead
Why does the mainstream ignore those whose predictions were right?
Though it’s helpful to have talent, that won’t guarantee success