A thought that's been on my mind a lot lately is, "I'd rather regret not being there, than regret being there."
I have (to me) a pretty big milestone this year; it's my 40th high school reunion, which will take place this weekend. For clarity, I now live 8 hours & two states away from where I grew up.
I attended my 20th & 30th, but I've been having second thoughts about this year. At first, I felt excited, yet with some trepidation. By this past weekend, it was much trepidation, but very little excitement. Last Saturday night, I made the decision not to go.
As with most things these days, the decision boils down to the current political climate. At the time of my 30th reunion, Trump had not been elected for the first time. Now, 10 years on, the world has changed, hopefully not irrevocably.
That said, due to social media, I have learned things I didn't need to know about my classmates and others. I've had people I grew up with attack me on Facebook because I disagree with everything about the current occupant of the Oval Office. I've had to unfriend and even block some people from those days to get them to leave me alone. In some cases, people I'd known since kindergarten.
I was honestly concerned there would be physical confrontations, and that's a shame.
I held my classmates in a special place in my mind, if not in high regard, heh heh. We went through 6 years of high school together (junior high and high were at the same school), and in some cases, we'd gone from kindergarten to senior year together. We grew up in a small town.
There are some people that the only reason we're friends is due to nostalgia. Our lives have nothing in common anymore, except where we grew up and went to school.
Unfortunately, some of them never left the small town, and it shows. Some who did leave have changed, and not for the better. Or maybe it was always there, and we didn't see it because there was no social media.
There are some people I'll genuinely miss seeing at the reunion, but that regret doesn't outweigh my trepidation for attending. There are some people who aren't attending that I'd really like to see, and that weighed on my decision as well. If it's meant to be that we see each other again, we'll cross paths. On the other hand, I'd rather remember some people as they were prior to 2016, rather than as they are now.
I wish my classmates and friends from home nothing but peace, prosperity, and happiness. That will never change. But I'm also not going to put myself in a position to be disappointed and regretful of my decision to attend. It's a shame, but it is what it is.
Thursday, January 15, 2026
Regrets & Nostalgia
Friday, January 2, 2026
2025 Reading Journey
I've been keeping track of my reading in a notepad on my phone for several years now. It works well enough, but doesn't provide the detailed stats I'd like to track. In 2026, I'll begin to track on Goodreads as well.
This past year, with the exception of a couple of books, I read mostly fiction. I also read 5 daily meditation books, which I'll list first.
I read a mix of eBooks and print, and while I own the majority of the books I read, I also borrowed some from the library this year. From January through mid June, I didn't read the same author twice, which I thought was pretty cool.
Without further ado, here is my 2025 literary journey:
(I read 30 books in 2024)
Daily Meditation Books:
Daily Reflections
24 Hours a Day
Beyond Belief
The Daily Stoic
The Daily Dad
(All the rest, in order from January - December)
You Are a Badass, Jen Sincero
Station Eleven, Emily St John Mandel
The Lost Art of Reading, David Ulin
Hyde, Craig Russell
Project Hail Mary, Andy Weir
A Botanist's Guide to Parties & Poisons, Kate Khavari
Killers of a Certain Age, Deanna Raybourn
The Trap, Ava Glass
Dark Space, Rob Hart & Alex Segura
Spook Street Mick Herron
Nicked, M. T. Anderson
Crown Jewel, Christopher Reich
Fetch Quest, Sandy Parker (Novella)
Chaos Terminal, Mur Lafferty
The Book of Doors, Gareth Brown
Starter Villian, John Scalzi
The Spare Man, Mary Robinette Kowal
The Road to Roswell, Connie Willis
The Sleepless, Victor Manibo
Bullet Train, Kotaro Isaka
The Midnight Library, Matt Haig
The Lost Apothecary, Sarah Penner
Red Rabbit, Alex Grecian
America Fantastica, Tim O'Brien
The Deep Sky, Yume Kitasei
Imaginary Friends, Alison Lurie
Winter Work, Dan Fesperman
Mr. Breakfast, Jonathan Carroll
The Master and Margarita, Mikhail Bulgakov
Secret Identity, Alex Segura
Murder Your Employer, Rupert Holmes
Sourdough, Robin Sloan
The Standardization of Demoralization Procedures, Jennifer Hofmann
Spring's Arcana, Lilith Saintcrow
Marion Lane and the Midnight Murder, T.A. Willberg
The Eldritch Arms, Barry Gregory (novella)
The Medusa Protocol, Rob Hart
The Salt-Black Tree, Lilith Saintcrow
Ninth House, Leigh Bardugo
The Atlas Six, Olivie Blake
A Botanist's Guide to Flowers & Fatality, Kate Khavari
Kills Well With Others, Deanna Raybourn
Three Assassins, Kotaro Isaka
I'm Beginning to Worry About this Black Box of Doom, Jason Pargin
When The Moon Hits Your Eye, John Scalzi
The Once and Future King, T.H. White
Artificial Condition, Martha Wells
Rogue Protocol, Martha Wells
Exit Strategy, Martha Wells
The Escape Artist, Brad Meltzer
The Stardust Grail, Yume Kitasei
The Keeper of Lost Causes, Jussi Adler-Olsen
Marion Lane and the Deadly Rose, T.A. Willberg
Rose of Jericho, Alex Grecian
The Lightning Rod, Brad Meltzer
Of Monsters and Mainframes, Barbara Truelove
The Cat Who Saved The Library, Sosuke Natsukawa
Ring Shout, P. Djéli Clark
The Society of Unknowable Objects, Gareth Brown
London Rules, Mick Herron
Infinite Archive, Mur Lafferty
Thief of Night, Holly Black
The Glass Hotel, Emily St. John Mandel
Alter Ego, Alex Segura
Floating Hotel, Grace Curtis
Arkangel, James Rollins
Midnight in Soap Lake, Matthew Sullivan
Hell Bent, Leigh Bardugo
Sheepdogs, Elliot Ackerman
Origin, Dan Brown
Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil, V.E. Schwab
A Botanist's Guide to Society and Secrets, Kate Khavari
The Mantis, Kotaro Isaka
Home, Martha Wells (short story)
Network Effect, Martha Wells
Rapport, Martha Wells (short story)
Marion Lane and the Raven's Revenge, T.A. Willberg
The Marlow Murder Club, Robert Thorogood
Atlas of Unknowable Things, McCormick Templeman
The Curse of Penryth Hall, Jess Armstrong
The Secret of the Three Fates, Jess Armstrong
The Devil in Oxford, Jess Armstrong
The Librarians, Sherry Thomas
The Thursday Murder Club, Richard Osman
Constituent Service, John Scalzi (novella)
The grand total for 2025 comes out to 83 books, 3 novellas, & 2 short stories.
Since I've been keeping track (say, the last 10 years), this is my most productive year of reading, by far. My previous best was 42 books several years back, so I'm very pleased with my progress in 2025. I didn't spend as much time trying to decide what to read next last year. In previous years, I'd waste days agonizing on that decision.
Here's to a 2026 full of literary adventures!
Daily Meditation Books:
Daily Reflections
24 Hours a Day
Beyond Belief
The Daily Stoic
The Daily Dad
(All the rest, in order from January - December)
You Are a Badass, Jen Sincero
Station Eleven, Emily St John Mandel
The Lost Art of Reading, David Ulin
Hyde, Craig Russell
Project Hail Mary, Andy Weir
A Botanist's Guide to Parties & Poisons, Kate Khavari
Killers of a Certain Age, Deanna Raybourn
The Trap, Ava Glass
Dark Space, Rob Hart & Alex Segura
Spook Street Mick Herron
Nicked, M. T. Anderson
Crown Jewel, Christopher Reich
Fetch Quest, Sandy Parker (Novella)
Chaos Terminal, Mur Lafferty
The Book of Doors, Gareth Brown
Starter Villian, John Scalzi
The Spare Man, Mary Robinette Kowal
The Road to Roswell, Connie Willis
The Sleepless, Victor Manibo
Bullet Train, Kotaro Isaka
The Midnight Library, Matt Haig
The Lost Apothecary, Sarah Penner
Red Rabbit, Alex Grecian
America Fantastica, Tim O'Brien
The Deep Sky, Yume Kitasei
Imaginary Friends, Alison Lurie
Winter Work, Dan Fesperman
Mr. Breakfast, Jonathan Carroll
The Master and Margarita, Mikhail Bulgakov
Secret Identity, Alex Segura
Murder Your Employer, Rupert Holmes
Sourdough, Robin Sloan
The Standardization of Demoralization Procedures, Jennifer Hofmann
Spring's Arcana, Lilith Saintcrow
Marion Lane and the Midnight Murder, T.A. Willberg
The Eldritch Arms, Barry Gregory (novella)
The Medusa Protocol, Rob Hart
The Salt-Black Tree, Lilith Saintcrow
Ninth House, Leigh Bardugo
The Atlas Six, Olivie Blake
A Botanist's Guide to Flowers & Fatality, Kate Khavari
Kills Well With Others, Deanna Raybourn
Three Assassins, Kotaro Isaka
I'm Beginning to Worry About this Black Box of Doom, Jason Pargin
When The Moon Hits Your Eye, John Scalzi
The Once and Future King, T.H. White
Artificial Condition, Martha Wells
Rogue Protocol, Martha Wells
Exit Strategy, Martha Wells
The Escape Artist, Brad Meltzer
The Stardust Grail, Yume Kitasei
The Keeper of Lost Causes, Jussi Adler-Olsen
Marion Lane and the Deadly Rose, T.A. Willberg
Rose of Jericho, Alex Grecian
The Lightning Rod, Brad Meltzer
Of Monsters and Mainframes, Barbara Truelove
The Cat Who Saved The Library, Sosuke Natsukawa
Ring Shout, P. Djéli Clark
The Society of Unknowable Objects, Gareth Brown
London Rules, Mick Herron
Infinite Archive, Mur Lafferty
Thief of Night, Holly Black
The Glass Hotel, Emily St. John Mandel
Alter Ego, Alex Segura
Floating Hotel, Grace Curtis
Arkangel, James Rollins
Midnight in Soap Lake, Matthew Sullivan
Hell Bent, Leigh Bardugo
Sheepdogs, Elliot Ackerman
Origin, Dan Brown
Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil, V.E. Schwab
A Botanist's Guide to Society and Secrets, Kate Khavari
The Mantis, Kotaro Isaka
Home, Martha Wells (short story)
Network Effect, Martha Wells
Rapport, Martha Wells (short story)
Marion Lane and the Raven's Revenge, T.A. Willberg
The Marlow Murder Club, Robert Thorogood
Atlas of Unknowable Things, McCormick Templeman
The Curse of Penryth Hall, Jess Armstrong
The Secret of the Three Fates, Jess Armstrong
The Devil in Oxford, Jess Armstrong
The Librarians, Sherry Thomas
The Thursday Murder Club, Richard Osman
Constituent Service, John Scalzi (novella)
The grand total for 2025 comes out to 83 books, 3 novellas, & 2 short stories.
Since I've been keeping track (say, the last 10 years), this is my most productive year of reading, by far. My previous best was 42 books several years back, so I'm very pleased with my progress in 2025. I didn't spend as much time trying to decide what to read next last year. In previous years, I'd waste days agonizing on that decision.
Here's to a 2026 full of literary adventures!
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