It was just a few minutes after 11 p.m. when I put Lucy’s leash on her and we headed outside for our late-night walk.
Before I even got outside, I heard unexpected noise. It sounded like people laughing. They were loud. I felt annoyed.
When I opened the front door and stepped outside with Lucy, I realized that my young next-door neighbor had a group of people over. I don’t know how many. I saw at least six extra cars.
They were at the back of the house — possibly in the back yard right next to mine — and they were loud enough that I could hear them talking and laughing all the way to the street in front of our houses. I felt mildly angry.
“He shouldn’t be having this kind of loud party this late,” I thought, “especially on a weeknight.”
As I silently walked down the street with Lucy, I kept hearing their laughter. And then it hit me why I felt angry.
They were happy. I’m not. And I felt jealous of them.

Black Friday orgy of consumerism makes me very uncomfortable
If you aren’t free to to be a bigot if you choose, you’re not really free
Why do humans keep running from the things we really need the most?
If you want to win a chess match, you have to play chess, not lecture the other players
You can’t see inside my heart, but my words invite you to know me
Who’s afraid of a federal shutdown? Many of us hope for the real thing
If principles of First Amendment still apply, principles of Second do, too
Freedom matters more than safety, even if you’re too blind to see that
If an election can destroy your life, your priorities are out of whack