The feeling crept up on me so gradually that I didn’t see it coming, but I’ve realized lately that I’m envious of my friend’s happy family.
It’s not a negative thing. I don’t resent what he has. In fact, I get a warm feeling of happiness about what they are. I’m just ready to have the same sort of happy family, too.
My friend mentioned to me this week that they’re all — parents and two children — about to go on vacation together for a couple of weeks. In an email this afternoon, I told him what I’d been thinking.
“I’m envious that you guys are going on a nice vacation together, but I’m even more envious of you having a great family to spend the time with,” I wrote. “At this point in my life, I’m painfully aware of how much I dislike not having a family. It’s funny how so many of our regrets in life are based on specific decisions we wish we had made differently.”
And then I told him about a dream I had a couple of weeks ago.

NOTEBOOK: Simplistic storytelling on TV news pushing nation to war
Is Herman Cain guilty of sexual misconduct? I wouldn’t be surprised
Was life planned before birth? What did you come here to learn?
We’re neither friends nor enemies, just strangers who share the past
‘This path leads to somewhere I think I can finally say, I’m home’
When love finally dies, it’s like a fever breaks and the pain is gone
Is it persistence or stubbornness to keep chasing uncertain outcomes?
Continued collapse of competence points toward decline of a culture
Florida requires drivers to hand over personal info — which it then sells