It happens more often than I like to admit. There’s an angry inner voice that seems to have a mind of its own.
“I hate everybody!” the voice hisses angrily in my head.
For years, I’ve joked that there’s a wide-ranging conspiracy to make me a misanthrope — and I fear it’s working. The joke has been my attempt to reconcile two things which can’t be reconciled:
— I choose to love others, for their benefit and my own.
— I hate so many of the people around me every day.
Those two things can’t be reconciled, so I make jokes about it. The more contact I have with humans, the more I feel like a misanthrope — and I hate feeling that way. It makes me feel so wrong inside, but something in me wants to lash out — needs to lash out — as though I’m defending myself.
And I think I finally understand why.

Hurt people hurt people, and it’s hard to forgive that in ourselves
I kinda like Rand Paul, but I don’t support anybody as ruler-in-chief
Zombie statists: ‘But if there’s no government, who’ll build roads?!’
Is this what happens when you teach children there are no absolutes?
Finding your own authentic voice is riskier than copying everybody else
We often value a love only after we’ve carelessly thrown it away
Odd interest in UK’s royal family suggests remnant of need for ruler
Predictions of doom keep failing, so isn’t it rational to doubt them?
Kind words can make difference for stressed parents at Christmas