I really enjoyed a short story by Joseph O'Neill, published in the January 26, 2026, edition of The New Yorker. The story is titled, "Light Secrets," and if you are a subscriber to the magazine, I believe that clicking that link should give you access If you are not a subscriber, you might try this link. I think that might work, too, though no guarantees!
"Light Secrets" are the opposite of "Dark Secrets." We all know about those "Dark Secrets," don't we? Things like this:
- What about the time that one of your work colleagues left his computer open when the coworker went to the restroom, and you read his screen, which you shouldn't have done, and which violated company policy, and because you did that you were therefore able to make a quick stock purchase that netted you $50,000, using your insider knowledge?
- Or, what about that time that one of your wife's best friends dropped by "unexpectedly," or so she claimed, while your wife was out of town? But what then eventuated was really all her fault, wasn't it?
- Or, what about the fact that your daughter, who ultimately achieved academic success, only got admitted to Stanford (you never told her this - or told your wife, either) because you made a $150,000 contribution to the university's development fund, and did so only after getting absolute assurances that your daughter would get in?
There are lots of "Dark Secrets" that are many times worse than those I just listed. We should count ourselves lucky if we don't have any of those really bad "Dark Secrets" - or any "Dark Secrets" at all, for that matter.
"Light Secrets" are also genuine "secrets." We don't talk about them. We don't reveal them, even to our best friends or family members - or even to people we absolutely know that we will never meet again. Here is how O'Neill introduces the idea of "Light Secrets," on the very first page of his five-page story:
P. says, "Everybody's got something to hide. Everybody." He wears his usual gloomy face. With no lessening of the gloom, he says, "but you know what else is true? Everybody's done something good that's hidden - the opposite of a dark secret.""A light secret," I suggest. "Precisely," P. says.
To repeat myself, I really liked O'Neill's story, and I encourage you to hunt it down. It struck me, after reading it, that going out of my way to build up a big, personal inventory of "Light Secrets" would be an excellent way to make worthwhile use out of whatever time I have left of my current life.
You might like that idea, too!













