On Pain and Death
Posted: March 29, 2005 | Author: mll | Filed under: Current, Miscellaneous, Politics, Science | Tags: books, health, websites | 1 comment » A friend turned me on to the blog No Milk Please. Hilarious. I wish I could write as wittily as the author.So coming upon the following quote makes me feel that I can actually improve as a writer, despite all the edits on the latest draft of an article:
There have now been many studies of elite performers — concert violinists, chess grand masters, professional ice-skaters, mathematicians, and so forth — and the biggest difference researchers find between them and lesser performers is the amount of deliberate practice they’ve accumulated. Indeed, the most important talent may be the talent for practice itself. K. Anders Ericsson, a cognitive psychologist and an expert on performance, notes that the most important role that innate factors play may be in a person’s willingness to engage in sustained training. He has found, for example, that top performers dislike practicing just as much as others do. (That’s why, for example, athletes and musicians usually quit practicing when they retire.) But, more than others, they have the will to keep at it anyway.
–Atul Gawande, “The Learning Curve,” The New Yorker, Jan. 28, 2002
In addition to writing for the New Yorker, Gawande has a book out called Complications: A Surgeon’s Notes on an Imperfect Science. I haven’t read it yet, but from what I’ve read in the New Yorker, Gawande is an excellent writer. He really makes the field of medicine accessible to lay readers.
[Later in the day]
Was listening to the Brian Lehrer Show today and heard the tail end of a discussion on “whether doctors work for profit or for the benefit of their patients.” Apparently an article by Gawande in this week’s New Yorker prompted the discussion. So that might be worth checking out.
And then on the Leonard Lopate Show, Garret Keizer spoke about issues surrounding the Terri Schiavo case. He made really good points, which I’ll try to post here later. But Keizer’s article, “Life Everlasting,” published in the Feb. 2005 issue of Harper’s magazine, can be read here. In the article, he makes such points as the following:
As for Terri Schiavo case, I find it difficult to make a judgment. I sympathize with her parents, but I also sympathize with her husband. And as Keizer wrote, I believe some people demonize Schiavo’s husband, trying to cast the situation as simply a case of devoted parents vs. disloyal husband.
[Even later in the day]
More food for thought: an article on Slate titled “Deathbed Conversion: The Lesson of Tom DeLay’s Mortal Hypocrisy,” about how DeLay (and his family) chose to let his father die after he suffered brain damage and went into a coma.