7-40 Challenge | Round 4, Day 27
I drove three hours tonight to my thirty-year high school reunion, spent three hours there, and drove three hours home. Nine hours for one evening. It was worth every mile.
Some people looked exactly the same. Some were unrecognizable. I walked up to one guy and said, honestly, I don’t remember you. He laughed and said, don’t feel bad — I don’t remember you either. So we started fresh and had a great conversation.
That’s the thing about thirty years. You’re not the same person anymore, and neither are they. The pressure of pretending otherwise disappears about ten minutes in.
I had a conversation that stopped me. A classmate told me he’d recently lost his wife to cancer. He knew about my own history with it. We talked for a while before I even recognized him — he’d spent so long pouring himself into caring for her that he’d changed completely.
Then he smiled and said something I won’t forget: “I knew she was sick when I married her. But I loved her, and I wanted to take care of her.”
I shook his hand, put my arm on his shoulder, and told him he was a good man. I meant it more than most things I’ve ever said.
Later, I sat with the friend who’s been my biggest champion for Phase Defiant. The guy who read my book, loved it, brainstormed ideas for me, offered to research things, and wouldn’t stop talking about the story. I looked him in the eye and said: if I had written this book only so you would read it and enjoy it, the whole thing was worth it.
He looked right back at me and said: you don’t understand how good your book is. Don’t quit. You’ve got something really good going, and you’re good at this.
Four days ago, I thought to myself out loud that my biggest roadblock to my book succeeding was the belief that nobody really cared. Tonight, someone who hasn’t seen me in thirty years looked me in the face and told me I was wrong.
