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    Standards of Care
    The Sun InterviewBy Naomi PittsStandards of CareRolonda Donelson on Bias and Anti-Science Attitudes in Medicine

    The reason Black women were used to develop the field of gynecology was because they were no more than property. They weren’t seen as people; they were just seen as things. The controlling of Black women’s bodies started with chattel slavery, but it continues today.

    Milk
    Readers WriteBy Our ReadersMilk

    Pumped for an infant, spilled at the dinner table, used as a tear gas antidote

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Browse Sections

Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

    Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

    Rowboating With Hobos

    I have three gifts: I can make an excellent cream soup, I’m a good speller, and most people who don’t think I’m a smart-ass or from Venus think I’m funny. Even my computer programmer ex-brother-in-law, who never laughs and is probably to some extent autistic, admits that I have a “sophisticated sense of humor.”

    By Poe BallantineFebruary 2014
    Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

    Pity The Man Who Doesn’t Travel

    Irish Mike and I had planned my trip — the “Grand Tour,” we liked to call it — on the floor of a job site. While all the other painters and construction workers were busy with lunch and football arguments, we’d draw a map of Europe in the dust with our fingertips and make wavy lines across it for my route.

    By Philip KellyFebruary 2014
    Pity The Man Who Doesn’t Travel
    Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

    Learning To Sleep

    You’re not really exhausted until the hallucinations start: Droplets of mercury floated in my peripheral vision. A lemon levitated out of the fruit bowl. A streetlight at the corner of State and Garfield laid its long body down on the sidewalk. The cat looked up at me from the corner of my desk, twitched his muzzle, and said, “Libby, Libby, Libby.”

    By Allyson Goldin LoomisFebruary 2014
    Learning To Sleep
    Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

    The Odds Of Injury

    In rugby I find a clan of women who braid their hair tight to their scalps, who have tattoos and girlfriends and are fiercely loyal. They are my comrades on the field. They risk injury for me, and I do the same for them. Since women’s rugby is an underfunded club sport, we fight for field space, wake up early, play on the rocky public fields of Oakland.

    By Rose WhitmoreFebruary 2014
    The Odds Of Injury
    Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

    The Last Harvest

    During the months when my parents’ dream of owning a farm died, I became a sleepwalker, and Dad became ever more diligent about hygiene. He shaved twice a day: once before the sun rose and again just before sleep. He kept his steel-toed work boots dirt-free, the leather mink-oiled, the laces neatly double knotted.

    By Doug CrandellJanuary 2014
    The Last Harvest
    Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

    Tea And Oranges

    This is how it works when times are hard, and even when times are better, if we’re lucky. We women stand on the sidewalk and rest our backs against fences and lean into open car windows to see who needs what. In my twenty-five years living on this block, there have been recessions before, but this one has lasted the longest.

    By Susan StraightJanuary 2014
    Tea And Oranges
    Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

    Running In Guantánamo

    I jog as far into this uncharted area as I can, toward the mouth of the river. A soldier emerges from some reeds, and then a dozen more. Guns are pointing at me. I have accidentally run into a squad on patrol in full gear.

    By Gary ThompsonJanuary 2014
    Running In Guantánamo
    Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

    The Finishing Touch

    When I was nineteen, I thought, If I haven’t published a novel by the time I’m twenty-one, I’ll be all washed up. While studying creative writing in graduate school, I thought, If I haven’t published a novel by the time I’m twenty-five, I’ll be all washed up. At thirty-five I quit drinking and thought, Now I really have to publish a novel, or I’m all washed up.

    By Cary TennisJanuary 2014
    Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

    Summit Fever

    Impossibly bright stars fill the sky like silver glitter sprayed from a fire hose. And, to our good fortune, we’ve chosen to climb on the night of the summer’s largest meteor shower. Each shooting star is like a Roman candle.

    By Davy RothbartJanuary 2014
    Summit Fever
    Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

    Teaching My Daughter To Walk

    If my daughter had been born to the Ashanti people in Ghana, she would have been abandoned at the riverbank.

    By Heather Kirn LanierJanuary 2014
    Teaching My Daughter To Walk
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