Wednesday, October 23, 2013


Stillness of Esme
lying between us in bed, in as deep a darkness as this
communality with street lights allows.
This is the profile of a girl calmed after a bad dream

Long neck.
Golden (her word), hair swooped aristocratically over a high forehead.
Tiny nose, delicate and
maybe--eyes still open? 
Her breathing has slowed from its earlier panicked pace.

Is she thinking and not sleeping?

That's when I realize,
grateful it's her, not him:  
This is the difference between girls and boys.
(I generalize here for the sake of sleep).

Simon could never lie so still even at 4:45 in the morning.
Deeply sleepy comes out in him as
Hilarious, if only to him.
Sideways smile slips out a happy “No,” tone tilting upwards at the end of the word
to show he means it but it’s not personal. 

Instead of sleep he would offer us his great corporeality, roiling waves of legs
swinging down up CRASH on the bed
Heavy head seesawing its turn to do the same.

Ouch! Everyone says, eventually.
Even him, at the backdoor of tears, as it gets 
way too late to be up so long, Love.

But Esme.
Her inner life as strong as his legs.
Esme’s silence, her Esmeness
maddening during the day when questions go unacknowledged
a not quite guileless look up, surprised, What?
is the what which allows this quiet form, this elegance to lie between us in our bed.
Now in the deep dark early morning I remember:
She has her own world we don’t know about
the one we hoped she would create.

I fail first, fall asleep.
She touches me reassuringly on the leg
as I drift off.  

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Friday, October 11, 2013

Health, Life, and Equality


Perhaps one day there will be a stem-cell treatment that can double one’s life expectancy by slowing the aging process, making a centenarian as spry as a quinquagenarian. But if such a serum benefits only the few who can afford it, our national life expectancy will hardly budge — it’s an average, after all. In 19th-century Sweden, the figure was dragged down by infant mortality. Today in the United States, it grows slowly because of the premature deaths of the less fortunate. Thanks to this vast inequality, even a high-tech fountain of youth would hardly move the needle.
“Look at the countries with the highest average life expectancy,” says Denney, referring to places like Japan, Australia, Canada and, yes, Sweden — nations that distribute their health resources more evenly. “Ultimately,” he says, “life expectancy is a measure of quality of life.”

By Maggie Koerth-Baker, science editor at BoingBoing.net and author of “Before the Lights Go Out,” on the future of energy production and consumption.

Published March 19, 2013 in the Magazine section of The New York Times.