The man sounded genuinely surprised. Shocked, even. He hadn’t seen this coming.
He was calling to tell me some terrible news about his son. The kid had done something stupid. Again. This time, it’s going to have life-changing consequences. And I should mention that this irresponsible child isn’t 16. He’s 24.
But my friend has spent a couple of decades enabling this overgrown child to be irresponsible — and the kid has never faced any consequences. But even though everybody else could see the pattern — and could see where things were inevitably leading — my friend seemed shocked.
I kept my mouth shut, but what I was listening to made me feel crazy.
If you smash a hammer into a porcelain teacup, the cup is going to shatter into tiny pieces. It would be crazy to be surprised at the result. Any rational person knew the outcome before the hammer reached the cup. The outcome was inevitable when the choice was made.
But we go through life — both individually and as a culture — acting bewildered when our actions produce their inevitable results.
When I see this playing out — in the lives of my friends and in the life of my culture — it makes me feel as though I must be crazy. And it leaves me desperate to get away from the insane drama that produces this sort of chaotic dysfunction.
People spend months or years or even decades creating insanity in their lives — and then they seem surprised when the inevitable results of their decisions suddenly show up.

Humans are impatient, but changes in Alabama show speed of change
Mark Bodenhausen was a principled libertarian, but he was an even better human being
FRIDAY FUNNIES
Be careful what you hunger for; it’s very often not what you need
Blind faith in our ability to reason led to arrogance, false certainty
Irony: Libyan rebels now rounding up blacks, sticking them into jails
Finding your own authentic voice is riskier than copying everybody else
What kind of hypocrite gives advice but won’t practice what he preaches?