When the bike-riding misfit Pee-wee Herman uttered those six unforgettable words, “I’m a loner, Dottie, a rebel,” he framed a personality type that many of us wish we could adopt for ourselves—the mysterious traveler, the outsider without remorse, the quintessential “lone wolf.” Think Mel Gibson in Mad Max, Ryan Gosling in Drive or Genos in One-Punch Man, for all the anime fans in our audience.
In the animal kingdom, lone wolves are somewhat rare but are usually more intelligent, stronger and, by all accounts, more dangerous than their pack-running brethren. In the world of humans, the same traits apply, but it takes a certain inner peace, determination and self-discipline to remain a lone wolf in a society that is deeply based on tribalism. Human lone wolves tend to be creative,…
