It was late at night when I got the emailed threat about five years ago. A suicidal friend sent me a dramatic picture — an obvious cry for help — with a knife poised against her wrist. She lives hundreds of miles away, so there was little that I could do to help, but I wondered where her husband was.
After I sent a reply trying to talk her into ending the threat — at least for that night — she sent back a sarcastic reply to my attempt to help her deal with this existential crisis.
“It’s not your job,” she wrote. “It’s the man-child’s who’s off playing computer games.”
I knew this was a continuing issue in her marriage. Her husband — about 30 years old — spent pretty much all of his non-work time playing computer games. As a result, they had fallen into living parallel lives. Although he knew she was depressed and suicidal, he chose to live in a fantasy world with gaming buddies instead of in the real world he had chosen for himself.

I can force child to obey me, but obedience comes with high cost
People with healthy self-esteem don’t fear what others might see
Hidden chains need to be broken, so I’ve become a reluctant rebel
I was getting frustrated with the interview Sunday afternoon, but I wanted to keep things civil and polite.
Whose life is it anyway? Police taser man trying to protect home from fire
FRIDAY FUNNIES
‘Conservative’ and ‘liberal’ should refer to temperament, not politics
Once you taste what is possible, you can’t accept being ‘normal’
If romantic love is real and true, does it never really fade away?
Correcting an old error: there’s no such thing as ‘We the People’