Today is my father’s birthday. If he hadn’t died two years ago, he would have turned 90 today.
There was nothing really wrong with him physically when he died. After he went into the hospital where he spent his final weeks, a nurse told me doctors didn’t really know what to do with him, because he had no real condition they could treat.
Six months before then, he had been healthy and active. He had still been dating off and on. He was still meeting women online through profiles on a couple of dating sites. The photo above is a selfie he took for one of those women. (He never was great with technology and obviously didn’t know to look at the mirror and not the screen.)
So what happened? How did a man with no real health issues go from actively trying to find companionship all the way to giving up on life — enough that he stopped eating for months and had become an emaciated shell of himself by the time friends discovered him?
He died of a broken heart. He’s the strongest evidence I know that unhappiness can kill a man — by making him give up on life.

There are more of us than ever, so why do many of us feel so alone?
Lousy personal choices are at root of most of our problems
I still have trouble accepting that my idealized world doesn’t exist
New command from the French state: ‘Thou shalt not say Facebook or Twitter on TV or radio’
Don’t trust this con man — or almost anybody else on ‘TV news’
After first six podcast episodes, I’m encouraged but still a rookie
Irrational beliefs hurt all of us when you hand power to the ignorant
When politicians insist the ‘war on drugs’ is working, they’re just following majoritarian incentives
Appeals to ‘common sense’ are frequently excuses to avoid thinking