I’ve found you a thousand times
I guess you’ve done the same
But then we lose each other
It’s just like a children’s game
— Harry Chapin, “Circle”
The warm breeze was heavy with the scent of honeysuckle that evening. There was still enough light to see, and the fading sunset made the sky colorful as the light dimmed and the shadows lengthened. But the honeysuckle scent is what I remember most.
I don’t know why that particular night remains with me. I was about 9 years old and I was one of seven or eight children playing hide-and-seek around the neighborhood. Our house was the center of the play area. There were a couple of houses to the left and one other to the right. There was a meadow behind our house — and an old, unused barn beyond that. It seemed that we played for hours.
Nobody wanted to stop, but it eventually got too dark to see. We split up to go to our own homes — happy with the games and ready to resume our hide-and-seek play on another day.
This memory came to my mind strongly tonight. And it suddenly occurred to me — for the first time in my life — that this sort of game helps prepare children for what’s ahead in their adults lives.

This mortal life swings between lonely misery and loving paradise
Egypt trying to prove democracy means tyranny of the majority
Outraged folks around world letting Diane Tran know she’s not alone
God may be working on what we need long before we can see it
If you play the DC power game, all that matters is the game
Why do humans keep running from the things we really need the most?
Trump bringing Marxism to U.S. better than Marx could’ve hoped
From hole I’ve fallen into today, world is a very alienating place