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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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    The Dog-Eared Page

    excerpted from
    We’ve Had A Hundred Years Of Psychotherapy — And The World’s Getting Worse

    Hillman: I would rather define self as the interiorization of community. And if you make that little move, then you’re going to feel very different about things. If the self were defined as the interiorization of community, then the boundaries between me and another would be much less sure.

    By Michael Ventura, James HillmanJuly 2016
    <em>excerpted from</em><br />We’ve Had A Hundred Years Of Psychotherapy — And The World’s Getting Worse
    The Dog-Eared Page

    excerpted from
    The Round Walls Of Home

    We need to send into space a flurry of artists and naturalists, photographers and painters, who will turn the mirror upon ourselves and show us Earth as a single planet, a single organism that’s buoyant, fragile, blooming, buzzing, full of spectacles, full of fascinating human beings, something to cherish. Learning our full address may not end all wars, but it will enrich our sense of wonder and pride.

    By Diane AckermanJune 2016
    <em>excerpted from</em><br />The Round Walls Of Home
    The Dog-Eared Page

    How To Triumph Like A Girl

    I like the lady horses best, 
    how they make it all look easy,
    like running 40 miles per hour
    is as fun as taking a nap, or grass.

    By Ada LimónMay 2016
    How To Triumph Like A Girl
    The Dog-Eared Page

    The Serpents Of Paradise

    I finish my coffee, lean back, and swing my feet up and inside the doorway of the trailer. At once there is a buzzing sound from below and the rattler lifts his head from his coils, eyes brightening, and extends his narrow black tongue to test the air.

    By Edward AbbeyApril 2016
    The Dog-Eared Page

    Three Little Events

    But maybe it wasn’t a fluke. Maybe it was a crazy little peek behind the curtain, a dim little whisper of providence from the wings. I had been expected, I was on schedule, I was taking the right journey at the right time. I was not alone.

    By Frederick BuechnerMarch 2016
    The Dog-Eared Page

    The Ledge

    The boy did for the fisherman the greatest thing that can be done. He may have been too young for perfect terror, but he was old enough to know there were things beyond the power of any man. All he could do he did, by trusting his father to do all he could, and asking nothing more.

    By Lawrence Sargent HallFebruary 2016
    The Ledge
    The Dog-Eared Page

    excerpted from
    The Surgeon As Priest

    I cannot see their hands joined in a correspondence that is exclusive, intimate, his fingertips receiving the voice of her sick body through the rhythm and throb she offers at her wrist. All at once I am envious — not of him, not of Yeshi Dhonden for his gift of beauty and holiness, but of her. I want to be held like that, touched so, received. And I know that I, who have palpated a hundred thousand pulses, have not felt a single one.

    By Richard SelzerJanuary 2016
    The Dog-Eared Page

    Girl

    This is how to make a bread pudding; this is how to make doukona; this is how to make pepper pot; this is how to make a good medicine for a cold; this is how to make a good medicine to throw away a child before it even becomes a child;. . .

    By Jamaica KincaidDecember 2015
    Girl
    The Dog-Eared Page

    excerpted from
    The Little Virtues

    The birth and development of a vocation needs space, space and silence, the free silence of space. Our relationship with our children should be a living exchange of thoughts and feelings, but it should also include deep areas of silence; it should be an intimate relationship but it must not violently intrude on their privacy; it should be a just balance between silence and words.

    By Natalia GinzburgNovember 2015
    The Dog-Eared Page

    excerpted from
    A Grief Observed

    I had my miseries, not hers; she had hers, not mine. The end of hers would be the coming-of-age of mine. We were setting out on different roads. This cold truth, this terrible traffic regulation (“You, Madam, to the right — you, Sir, to the left”) is just the beginning of the separation which is death itself.

    By C.S. LewisOctober 2015
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