Tuesday, January 23, 2024

Rescuing the Rescuer: Saving Myself from a Lifetime of Hurt

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Cathleen Calkins | Longreads | January 23, 2024 | 17 minutes (4,667 words)

In my dream, I’m dressed in uniform—black ski pants and a red vest with a white cross—when I find a man lying in the snow. The late afternoon sun lights up the wispy blond hair that’s escaped his helmet. He looks at peace, like he’s sleeping, yet the angle his hips make with his thighs is cartoonish and grotesque. 

I kneel at his side and work quickly, looking for clues. He’s breathing but not moving. I reach inside his jacket to apply a painful sternum rub—my attempt to rouse him—and the smell of weed envelops me. I key my radio, but my rapid-fire screams of I need help, backboard, oxygen, ambulance! don’t transmit. This is where I wake up: alone, sticky with anxiety, its grip firm in the back of my throat. And each time I remember the permanence of that day: the man lying in the snow never walked again. 

I’d had this dream for almost a decade, and there are others—each an endless scroll of the anguish I’ve seen. Like the college kid who skied well beyond his ability. His epic fall left his pupils looking like two mismatched drops of motor oil. Smokey, dark, and unequal. Or the tiny girl who’d fallen from the chair lift at a span five times her height. Her offense? Playing pattycake with her friend without the protection of the comfort bar. Luckily, the fall only broke her femur.

As a seasoned ski patroller, I thrived in this rescue culture. Until I didn’t. And that’s when my dreams became nightmares.


Growing up in rural, central New York, I spent my free time outdoors. Summers on the network of rivers that crisscrossed the region and winters on Labrador Mountain, an hour’s drive from my family’s home. I preferred the cold. Between weekend trips to ski with my family, I jogged at night, making laps of my neighborhood after dinner. When I grew too warm, I’d sit in a snowbank and, in the cool stillness, enjoy the anonymity of the night. In this space, cold and snow became synonymous with joy and freedom.

As a seasoned ski patroller, I thrived in this rescue culture. Until I didn’t. And that’s when my dreams became nightmares.

At 33, I became a ski patroller. I had wanted this career since I was a child; I committed to the profession while other kids dreamed of being an astronaut, doctor, or scientist. My reverence for this work came from admiring the men who patrolled the nighttime slopes of Labrador Mountain. When I was a teenager, busloads of kids took over the resort every Thursday evening. The ski patrol was always ready to save us from ourselves. 


My two friends and I liked to ski the treed glade that separated the designated night runs. Populated and thick with red bark willow and eastern white pine, only a narrow, winding trail sliced through the shadows. It was dark and off-limits, and we thought that was cool.

In the middle of the forest sat a small clearing with three knee-high tree stumps. It was our secret spot and, in the quiet of the night, we inhaled the cold. We also passed a joint and sipped from a flask filled with Southern Comfort stolen from my parent’s liquor cabinet. We were three adolescents caught in the reckless theater of our young lives. But someone always noticed our absence from the safety of the lighted slopes. 

At the edge of the forest, a college-aged guy wearing a red vest with a white cross waited. Warm from the liquor and more than a little stoned, we’d come to a jumbled stop in front of him. He’d ask our names, our school, and what we were doing in the woods. “I’m showing my friends the trail I ski with my dad,” I’d say. It worked every time. He would admonish us to “stay out of the trees” and let us go. We were his usual Thursday night offenders.


My career as a ski patroller took shape after a conversation I had with a stranger on a pay phone in Reds Meadow, just outside California’s Yosemite National Park. I was on day five of a thru-hike on the John Muir Trail. Freshly showered and lubricated with a German-style pilsner, I confessed to Joe, my hiking partner, that I wanted to quit my corporate job and become a ski patroller. Joe, it turned out, was best friends with Cristof, who recruited patrollers at Mount Waterman, a small ski resort that sits close to downtown Los Angeles. We scraped together quarters from other hikers so Joe could call Cristof before handing the phone to me.

Two months later, I sat in the first aid course Cristof had recommended with 20 other enthusiastic want-to-be patrollers. The course was EMT-equivalent and designed for the professional rescuer. For five months we sat through biweekly training in lifesaving techniques, studying our ABCs—airway, breathing, and circulation. We also studied our D and Es. A deformity, like abnormal swelling or a bump on the skin caused by a broken bone, signaled us to expose the deformity to see the extent of the injury. 

While there was no strict procedure for providing lifesaving first aid, the process for treating injuries is somewhat formulaic. As we became skilled at recognizing injuries based on their mechanism, or cause, we’d also become adept at the care to provide. Each mechanism had a lockstep response. For a skier hitting a tree, the mechanism was sudden deceleration. While the range of injuries was vast, the lifesaving action was simple: backboard and transport.


The violence of injury is remarkable. The class scared me. I remembered the evening I drank too much on a Thursday night foray into the forest with my friends. I was skiing too fast for the icy conditions. The tracks had frozen in the trail that zigzagged through the trees, making it nearly impossible to check my speed. I hit a tree. Hard. The impact gave me a lump on my temple the size of a silver dollar and left the right side of my rib cage feeling spongy. I didn’t sleep that night, and my head pounded for days. 

I had come close to sustaining permanent injury, but a future lost to my youth was never my intention. Skiing equaled freedom, autonomy, and power. It represented unchecked permission to glide through each moment and make my own decisions. Perhaps it was this early negligence that compelled adult me to want to help others who found themselves in situations they had never intended.

Six months after my phone conversation with Cristof, we met in person on my first day as a ski patrol rookie at Mount Waterman. By then, I’d passed my first aid test and was ready to work on real injuries and put my new skills to use.


The first time I witnessed respiratory arrest, I was six years into my career as a ski patroller. 

There is nothing more fundamental to life than breathing, and the college kid who lay below me had stopped. The dull, leaden blue of his lips was creeping to his cheeks. It was as if a watercolorist had swiped the soaked tip of her brush across his jaw and the pigment had begun to bleed and then dry. 

As my coworker methodically looked for clues to his injury, I knelt in the spring-soft snow and held C-spine, a life-sustaining measure for suspected spinal trauma. An uncomfortable position to hold for long, I was leaning over the boy’s face—my nose hovering above his—as my knees lightly touched his shoulders and I cupped my gloved hands on either side of his head. “He’s not breathing,” I whispered, as if I were afraid the boy would hear me. Feeling helpless, I mumbled, “We need to move quicker,” in judgment only of myself. 

The boy lay motionless on the snow as other skiers and snowboarders slid past. Snippets of their conversations filled the air above us. Let’s hit that again, the snow is really good today. Ready for lunch? Trivial. Unimportant. Memorable. While time stood as still as the boy on the snow, the movement around us continued to swell.

A moment later, we repositioned his jaw and the boy took a breath. He also opened his eyes. Relief swept through me as oxygen returned color to his skin, and I no longer worried that mine was the last face this boy would ever see.


The alchemy between rescuer and rescued is strange: like a romantic relationship, only faster moving. The euphoria of starting simply at hello, I’m here to help before moving on and culminating at what feels like deep attachment. We say my patient, as in they transported my patient to the hospital, or my patient opted to return to the slopes, or my patient is in the bar. I felt possessive of those I spent so little time with because our paths crossed at a moment they needed my help. Perhaps I cared too much.

A moment later, we repositioned his jaw and the boy took a breath. He also opened his eyes. Relief swept through me as oxygen returned color to his skin, and I no longer worried that mine was the last face this boy would ever see.

I used to wonder how the people I’d assisted were doing. Like the college student who snagged first chair to get on the snow early so he could make it home before his afternoon class. He didn’t look like a skier. His cheap snow pants were too big, his cotton hoodie soaked. I remember how crumpled he looked when I skied up to him and how his inaudible moans grew louder when we secured him to the backboard. Had his injury prevented him from leading the life he wanted?

During my third year, I assisted an older woman who was sitting at the edge of a wide run on the mountain’s upper slopes. She couldn’t stand and seemed resigned to the fact that she would never ski again. Between long draws on a cigarette, she explained in detail the pop she heard and felt in the back of her left knee. The snow was new and wet and heavy; it had prevented her uphill ski from turning in tandem with her downhill ski. A sport-ending injury, she couldn’t move without excruciating pain. As I skied her down the mountain in the toboggan, I listened as she softly cried into the blanket I’d wrapped her in. For years after, I’d occasionally see her at the grocery store, where I would watch from a distance and convince myself her gait was better than the last time I’d seen her. 


As I experienced both trivial and traumatic moments day after day, an emotional narrative emerged, and I began to confront the falsehood that I too would be okay. My thinning confidence overshadowed my passion to rescue others, and seven years into my career, I became terrified to do my job. 

I was anxious that I’d be tasked to do something I couldn’t do, like misinterpret a patient’s rapid pulse and shallow respirations for something else when their distended jugular vein (signaling a collapsed lung) was buried beneath layers of clothing. I worried that I’d cause more injury to the injured; or that I’d fail, and failure had repercussions I couldn’t entertain. 

Even on my days off, it was an endless loop of pointless dialogue that rarely paused, causing sleepless nights and nightmares. The cracks in my readiness already visible. 

On most shifts, I felt transcendence, especially with the care I gave: an ice pack to a 5-year-old whose knee had an invisible ache. A splint to a dad whose wrist resembled a fork. A wheelchair ride to a teenager who’d ascended the mountains too quickly, only to collapse on the slopes from altitude sickness. More than a string of kind words to a woman whose ankle was likely fractured beyond repair. 

I was confident because those injuries felt routine. I’d experienced each one enough times to grow comfortable with what I needed to do. I wasn’t flawed and someone else’s experience—their fear, their pain, their reaction—was theirs. And I didn’t take my work home with me when we parted ways. 

Except, I was mistaken. Even those experiences eventually became too much.


As a patroller, I have a front row seat to someone in pain, and pain causes people to behave and react erratically. Screaming is distracting and, at work, I wanted it to stop. That’s when my patience wore thin. To someone shrieking at the top of their lungs, I’d demand they calm down. To someone I couldn’t understand because their sobbing made it hard to hear their words, I told them I couldn’t help if they didn’t stop crying. It wasn’t that I didn’t care, it was that I didn’t want to feel—prioritizing my pain over theirs. Those interactions only added to my mounting guilt and shame.

My empathy waning, I was constantly on edge and amped. My burnout singed other areas of my life too. I picked fights with my husband about the most innocuous things. I’d yell and argue about the coats he’d allow to pile up on the hook by the front door until I couldn’t breathe. I’d berate him for leaving an empty coffee mug in my car, never satisfied with his reaction or apology. I was negative and moody and unhinged. I normalized my behavior—it was who I was. But it wasn’t who I wanted to be.


A cowboy-esque, I’m-as-tough-as-they-come attitude has shaped the culture of ski patrol. As professionals, we bring calm to a chaotic rescue scene. The end goal: to ensure the injured remain resilient. But that resiliency is one-sided. Until recent years, caring for a ski patroller who works one gruesome incident after another has not been on anyone’s agenda. 

Talking about the toll working grim scenes and witnessing life-ending injuries takes on us is seen as weak. In fact, the trauma ski patrollers face is cumulative and can cause a stress injury, a specific ache invisible to everyone, including ourselves. There’s never been a consistent approach, or even acceptance, to say “I’m not feeling it today.” Instead, we are expected to forget yesterday’s gory details and show up for our shift unaffected by the past. But that exposure to nonstop trauma catches you.

Holly Christensen, an Idaho-based master clinician in Accelerated Resolution Therapy, a form of psychotherapy used to treat traumatic stress, explains cumulative trauma like this: “We think we have a reservoir to hold and to tolerate every traumatic experience, and that our reservoir is limitless. But if you don’t pay attention to what’s happening—to the warning signs—we risk hitting a threshold we didn’t even know was approaching.” This is when stress injury forms and, Christensen says, we often don’t know what the trigger will be.

Understandably, we think that spark will be the next big incident we see. But when our reservoir is close to full, the brain doesn’t differentiate between death or a twisted knee. In practice, the thing likely to tip the balance is more benign; it’s less shocking and more ordinary, and as insignificant as a drop in the already full bucket. This is why we, as rescuers, don’t recognize when we need help. 


The brain’s amygdala, hippocampus, and prefrontal cortex help us respond to stressful situations. When our brain is healthy, the amygdala, our most primitive region, categorizes our experiences into sensory fragments, while the hippocampus acts as the brain’s camcorder: recording an event so we can remember it accurately to make sense of it later. But Christensen emphasizes, when we hit our trauma threshold, that sensory record—sounds, smells, colors—gets coded incorrectly. 

When these sensory experiences overload, they lock up our logical brain, or prefrontal cortex, which is the most sophisticated region Christiansen says. Often the incident that pushes a rescuer over the threshold is something mundane, a situation we’ve handled countless times before. Or the trigger is a color—like a guest’s red jacket, or a blue hat. “Logically, our brain questions why this situation bothers us, why these seemingly insignificant things are what sideline us as rescuers.” It doesn’t take much, Christiansen adds. “While the prefrontal cortex tells us we can handle it, we actually can’t without clearing stuff out, which requires a way to process and release the cumulation of our trauma.” In essence, our brain tricks us into thinking we’re okay, when really, we’re not.


The signs were there long before I noticed them; I was better at burying the trauma than dealing with it. One Saturday, at the end of a particularly long shift, I remember feeling like I had the bottled-up energy of a storm. There was an intensity I knew I needed to dissipate. Vivid, violent, and untamable. Drinking did the trick. So did sitting alongside my coworkers and sharing our gore stories. 

It wasn’t unusual for us to talk about our work experiences to get over them. We discussed how a guest had pulled their OPA, a device used to maintain an airway in an unconscious patient, out of their mouth mid-transport to the first-aid room. We reenacted the foul language a teen with a bad concussion had used when responding to our questions. We made fun of how the injured were dressed and judged them by the equipment they used. 

To laugh in the face of calamity is cathartic. But to anyone else, our playful banter about the injured would have seemed callous, monstrous even. But for us, it was meaningless and our way to release the day’s intense stress and anxiety. Along with drinking, our discourse became routine. 

To laugh in the face of calamity is cathartic. But to anyone else, our playful banter about the injured would have seemed callous, monstrous even.

However, alcohol was a crutch and I didn’t stop once the tab was paid. It continued at home and my strategy was to hold onto the buzz to cope. But drinking to excess gave me a false sense of hope, akin to using a Band-Aid to hold a gaping wound closed. Booze merely masked my symptoms and did nothing to curb the fervor of my rising anxiety. The next morning, hungover and rough from a poor night’s sleep, I’d return to work to face and feel the same stresses as the day before. 

It was only during the off season that I prioritized self-care. Then I had the time to catch up and tend to both the visible and invisible injuries of ski patrolling. From April through November, I traded plastic ski boots for flip-flops to heal my mangled feet, practiced yoga to calm my central nervous system, chased endurance adventures to retain my physical strength, and tried to drink less frequently. All to reset my resilience so I could be capable and clear-minded when winter rolled around. 

But taking care of myself felt more like something else I needed to overcome. And by the end of fall, there were still deep-seated issues that I simply could not mend without expressing the angst I felt, and that was years away.


As ski patrollers, we are trained to anticipate something bad happening during our shift. We’re taught to be ready, quick, and calm, which in a classroom is easy. But in reality, it’s harder than expected. 

But taking care of myself felt more like something else I needed to overcome. And by the end of fall, there were still deep-seated issues that I simply could not mend without expressing the angst I felt, and that was years away.

It’s imperative we show up physically ready and emotionally whole. Luckily, the majority of the first aid we deliver is easy to provide—a sling for a dislocated shoulder or a ride down the mountain in a rescue toboggan. We walk away from those incidents as saviors; the ones who confidently told them they would be okay. But for the bigger, more tragic events that require every synapse firing at a level hard to sustain, we, as rescuers, are impacted, and there is no one to tell us we’ll be okay. 

I wasn’t warned that working traumatic scenes came with a separate set of risks. I wasn’t taught to recognize my own emotional trauma. I was trained to save others, tend to their injuries, and develop the muscle memory to react quickly. I was prepared to ensure a scene was safe to enter, to mitigate the possibility that I’d sustain a season-ending injury. And that is easy to do—it relies on my senses and intuition and experience, something I am attuned to. I didn’t know flashbacks and nightmares, anxiety and avoidance, negative thoughts and a change in my mood were also part of what I’d signed up for.


There’s a paradox to ski patrol—you’re essential but forgotten. Vital then invisible. Moved aside when an ambulance arrives, left to silently heal as your patient is wheeled away. Even worse, we are replaced as the rescuer so we can deal with the physical and emotional mess the injured have left behind, like capturing every detail in a written report, delivering the bad news to a family member, comforting a grieving friend, tagging the equipment and clothing left behind, removing the bloodied bandages from the floor, and completing your shift so you can sit at the bar and drink your day away. 

We think we’re good after talking about our shift’s events over a beer. We feel seen and heard. Alcohol heals our wounds temporarily and, in a group context, that’s okay. But often, the self-destruction escalates and continues when we’re alone. The cumulative trauma ski patrollers face is considered a stress injury, and it alters the way we move through life, the way we respond, think, and feel.


For me, anger became a problem, and I was angry at the injured. Their careless horseplay, their determined recklessness, and their simple ignorance—everything that led up to a full-blown rescue reflected a series of poor decisions and a certain self-centeredness I couldn’t forgive. 

By the time I arrived on scene for the guy in my dream, my colleague had discovered he didn’t have any feeling below his waist. Her sleuthing was a gift. Now it was simple: get him on a backboard and off the mountain. Between bouts of brief consciousness, he landed a few heavy punches as we worked to secure him for transport, and when we lifted him off the snow, an empty fifth of gin fell from an interior coat pocket. At least he had movement of his upper limbs, I told myself. Thirty minutes later we loaded him into a waiting ambulance. 

When the door of the ambulance closed, I didn’t feel the relief that delivering a person to a higher level of care could provide. Him heading to a hospital should have left me feeling certain. Certain in the care we’d provided, certain he’d be okay, certain he’d overcome the lasting effects of his injury. Instead, I asked myself: is this all there is to it, to never walk again? Severing your spinal cord seemed so simple; swift yet incomprehensible. And it took no more time than it takes to hit send on an email.

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That day, I returned to the scene where it had happened. I was there to document the depth of his error. I recorded the marks in the snow, measured the width of the run, triangulated the tree’s location so we could find the exact spot he lost movement in his legs should we need to. After, to clear my head, I took a lap. I hoped the act of skiing, the thing that gave me the most joy in life, would take my mind off what had happened. 

Instead, caught in a cloud of my thoughts, I hooked my ski on something in the snow and fell face forward with a thud so hard I expected the pain to never end. That day, my patrol director sent me home. The mild concussion I sustained only added to my anger and difficulty to emotionally heal. It was the first time I’d had an injury at work acknowledged by someone else. I’d been so careful about my physical health and so negligent about my psychological well-being.


Our body and mind provide the absolute representation of ourselves. To lose life or mobility or the capacity to think well is unimaginable and challenges everything familiar. Sustaining permanent injury is not the intent of the millions of skiers and snowboarders who flock to America’s winter resorts looking only for a day of fun. Yet the unthinkable happens at a frequency that terrifies me. 

During the 2021–22 season, 57 people lost their lives and 54 people sustained catastrophic trauma, like permanent head, spine, or neurological injury. A high percentage of those who died were young men who had collided with a tree. Even when you consider that 61 million skiers and riders visited US ski areas during that same period, I find these statistics staggering. Staggering because for every lost life or catastrophic injury, I know there were countless ski patrollers who bore witness to that pain and suffering. 


For a ski patroller, performing consequential rescues is a bit like playing roulette. Christensen says it is only a matter of time before we, too, become injured beyond repair. Pain is tricky and affects us all differently. Relieving the pain of cumulative trauma is exhausting if you don’t know its signs and symptoms. But this is changing as more resorts address the challenges ski patrollers face. While psychological first aid, PFA for short, is not new—it came into prominence after 9/11—ski resorts are only starting to adopt it. But to do PFA well, to address your stress injury, you must share your truth, and being vulnerable is complicated and hard. 

It means admitting you are flawed to the people who rely on you. Signaling failure and conceding to your coworkers that you may not have their back, and that trust is vital. In my 17th year, I took a two-year sabbatical, choosing to be a skier only. I became part of the masses who go to the mountains to shred the powder, enjoy the vibe, and find joy in the groomed corduroy runs, never exposed to the sadness when someone else gets hurt. I also moved to a resort where the terrain—natural, soft, and forgiving, with open pitches and less people and snowpack—was less likely to contribute to injury, and I joined a patrol that made an effort to safeguard my emotional well-being. 


The first time I experienced PFA, I wasn’t invested in the outcome. We were asked to assign ourselves a color that matched our mood, and our choices were green, yellow, orange, and red. The colors held meaning: choosing green meant I was emotionally and physically ready for whatever happens, that my team could count on me no matter what. Choosing yellow, orange, or red signaled something was amiss: I was less than capable of stepping up to whatever the day threw my way. 

I was entrenched in the old ways, and I blurted “green,” even though I was clearly yellow—tired, dehydrated, and slightly hungover from the party the night before. In my mind, I was paid to show up ready, and giving voice to vulnerability of my own making wasn’t an option. By not taking care of myself, I let everyone else down, including me.

But something happened in the persistence and practice of honestly describing how I was feeling. As I watched others open up, I did too. That alone was cathartic—creating a safe space to share our feelings of helplessness, anger, and depression. Admitting I was yellow helped me see I was wounded and begin to address my own stress injury. In those moments, I finally realized there was a lockstep approach to rescuing the rescuer and it started with becoming mindful and trusting and willing to heal.


Now my dreams are formulaic. When a situation I’ve experienced shows up, I calm myself by floating above the chaos. I recognize the sad narrative and skip to the end. In one, I’m in the locker room, changing from my uniform into my street clothes. I twist the radio in my chest pocket to off, as if it has significance beyond silencing the chatter. In another, I close my eyes and exhale. My breath looks heavy, and it holds the activity of my day. I watch as familiar shapes—a skier, an ambulance, a rescue toboggan—become less recognizable. In each, the lightness returns. I smile and leave. And then it goes dark, and I wake up rested and relieved and ready.


Cathleen Calkins is a freelance writer and ski patroller and sits on the Board of Women of Patrol. She lives outside Bend, Oregon, with her husband and temperamental dog, Betty.

Editor: Krista Stevens
Copyeditor: Cheri Lucas Rowlands



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Monday, January 22, 2024

How a Script Doctor Found His Own Voice

Scott Frank is one of the most successful screenwriters working in Hollywood today, with a track record of writing and rewriting solid films for four decades. Patrick Radden Keefe’s New Yorker profile is a treat for writers and film enthusiasts, and really anyone who’s enjoyed the movies and TV series that Frank has brought to life, including Get Shorty, Minority Report, and The Queen’s Gambit.

Studios summon him to punch up dialogue or deepen a character or untangle a contorted third act. For such assignments, which are generally uncredited, he commands a fee that he acknowledges is “insane”: three hundred thousand dollars a week. Most jobs last a few weeks. He has done rewrites on nearly sixty films—possibly more than any other contemporary screenwriter—including “Saving Private Ryan,” “Night at the Museum,” “Unfaithful,” “The Ring,” and “Gravity.” (He also did “a lot of the X-Men movies,” he told me, adding, “I don’t remember their titles.”)

“Most people can do story or character,” Stacey Sher, who produced “Get Shorty” and “Out of Sight,” told me. “Scott can do both, and that’s really rare.” Character always comes first for Frank, however. He avoids outlines, preferring to navigate his scripts without G.P.S. Ideally, his characters will become so fully realized that they’ll grab the wheel and steer the narrative in unexpected directions.



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Friday, January 19, 2024

The Top 5 Longreads of the Week

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This story was funded by our members. Join Longreads and help us to support more writers.

In this week’s edition:

  • A remorseful juror decides to take a stand—more than 30 years later.
  • A Palestinian writer considers what it means to bear witness to unrelenting atrocity.
  • A look at the uncertain future of a once-captive beluga whale in Norway.
  • A dive into weightlifting culture and the destigmatization of steroids.
  • A coming-of-age tour of the early internet, before we were all Extremely Online.

1. The Juror Who Found Herself Guilty

Michael Hall | Texas Monthly | January 16, 2024 | 9,962 words

In this riveting braided feature for Texas Monthly, Michael Hall unravels how it all went wrong for Carlos Jaile. In the ’80s, Jaile had been living the American dream in Texas as a successful Kirby vacuum salesman who embraced the sales motto “persistence over resistance.” Suddenly, one day, the police showed up at his office to take him away, allegedly for raping a young girl. Estella Ybarra sat on Jaile’s jury. She’d voted him guilty, but felt pressured into the decision by two fellow jurors—pushy white men who could not be talked down. Hall gives you all of this up front: we’ve got a miscarriage of justice, a remorseful juror, and a man incarcerated for decades for a crime he did not commit. We think we know what happened, but we don’t know precisely how it happened. Hall’s brilliant pacing spurs your need to understand how egregious detective work, grievous police errors, and two loudmouth jurors put Jaile away for life plus 20 years; his exceptional storytelling rewards you for tracking Estella Ybarra as she confronts her conscience to embrace “persistence over resistance” to free an innocent man. “Everyone involved in Carlos’s case found a reason to look the other way,” writes Hall. “Everyone, that is, except for one woman determined to do the right thing.” A wrongful conviction overturned is always a bittersweet read. And while the most beautiful thing is that Carlos Jaile does go free, it’s Hall’s deep craft that does justice to his story and to an emotional and poignant conclusion you will not forget. —KS

2. The Work of the Witness

Sarah Aziza | Jewish Currents | January 12, 2024 | 2,587 words

It has been three months since Israel began a relentless campaign of violence in Gaza. Israeli forces have killed nearly 25,000 people, some 9,600 of whom were children. They have displaced roughly 85 percent of the remaining population and pushed survivors to the brink of famine. Day after day, the world has watched the devastation. We have seen bodies crushed by rubble, mothers weeping over dead babies, doctors tending to the injured in hospitals plunged into darkness by power cuts. What’s happening is unconscionable, unforgivable, and there is no end in sight. In a tremendous essay, Palestinian writer Sarah Aziza considers what it means to bear witness to a “livestreamed genocide,” to sit with our own horror and helplessness. “I have been pondering not the English, prosecutorial witness, but the Arabic,” Aziza writes. “In this, our, language, the verb to witness comes from the root شهد . This is also the source of the much-maligned word شهيد, shaheed, which means, literally, witnesser, but is often translated as martyr. . . . To be a witness is to make contact, to be touched, and to bear the marks of this touch.” In this sense, to witness atrocity is to be wounded by it. “We must make an effort to stay with what we see, allowing ourselves to be cut,” Aziza continues. “This wound is essential. Into this wound, imagination may pour—not to invade the other’s subjectivity, but to awaken awe at the depth, privacy, and singularity of each life. There, we might glimpse, if sidelong, how much of Gaza’s suffering we will never know. This is where real witness must begin: in mystery.” —SD

3. The Whale Who Went AWOL

Ferris Jabr | The New York Times Magazine | January 14, 2024 | 6,434 words

When Hvaldimir the beluga whale first appeared in northern Norway, he was wearing a harness, apparently a leftover from his time in the Russian Navy. (Satellite photos of Russian naval bases around Murmansk—near the spot Hvaldimir turned up—show sea pens he may have escaped from.) That’s right, whales are captured and trained for use in the military. I knew we had been keeping cetaceans in tanks for entertainment since the 1860s, but I did not know we forced them into military service. A quote from this excellent piece by Ferris Jabr hit me hard: “Whales and dolphins are basically the last animals on Earth that have to perform seven days a week until they die while living in a completely barren box without even a rock to hide behind.” Hvaldimir is just one whale, but his story echoes those of thousands. Can a once-captive whale survive in the wild? Or, as Jabr writes, can a “severely traumatized victim of abduction reintegrate with society?” A tangle of humans are now involved with Hvaldimir’s welfare, a mess of ambition, ignorance, noble intentions, and bickering. Jabr’s writing is understated yet searing: we don’t really know what to do with captive whales. From the first line, this essay gripped me, but by the end, I felt like I did after watching the 2013 documentary Black Fish: deflated. If only we hadn’t taken them in the first place.  —CW

4. Steroid to Heaven

Adrian Nathan West | The Baffler | January 12, 2024 | 3,856 words

There’s joy in finding a story that engages with one of your core interests, and even more when that interest is generally ignored or disdained by the “literary” world. So it was almost a shock this week when two different pieces took on the world of physical culture and weightlifting. (The last time I came across one of those was nearly two years ago.) While I enjoyed Jordan Castro’s Harper’s piece, Adrian Nathan West’s Baffler story is a truly rare bird: an argument you don’t agree with, yet thoroughly enjoy. (If you happen to enjoy deadlifts, that’s a bonus, but I promise it’s not a prerequisite.) West, a longtime resident of the weight room and the jiujitsu dojo but also “a discreet man with modest bodily goals,” does his level best to destigmatize steroids, even yearn for them. But he does so smartly, both by picking apart the double standard of their demonization and by being honest about his own desires—all while casting a gimlet eye on the swollen idiocy of roided-out fitness influencers. “As Adorno noted in his writings on astrology,” he writes in one of many stunning passages, “individuals’ awareness of their dependence on knowledge systems that exceed their grasp is closely associated with authoritarian conformity; for the same reason, young steroid users, faced with the complexities of organic chemistry, are likely to turn away from the hundreds of studies on PubMed and seek out some loudmouth with nineteen-inch arms who tells them what they want to hear.” In fact, it’s probably not fair to call this an essay about lifting weights; it’s something else entirely. It’s a piece about danger and hysteria and self-delusion. About what happens when the fantasy of physical transformation becomes a little less fantastic. About making the illicit pedestrian. In other words: weird flex . . . but OK. —PR

5. Coming of Age at the Dawn of the Social Internet

Kyle Chayka | The New Yorker | January 13, 2024 | 3,986 words

In this excerpt from his new book, Filterworld: How Algorithms Flattened Culture, Kyle Chayka recalls an early internet that allowed “creative possibility” and “self-definition”—a web that many of us miss. When he tells us his AOL Instant Messenger username, “Silk,” I immediately recall my first AOL screen name, “RsrvoirGrl.” (Yes, in high school I was obsessed with Quentin Tarantino films.) When he describes posting to LiveJournal, where his writing “became a kind of public performance,” I remember my own musings on Diaryland, another early publishing platform. Those diary entries make me cringe when I read them now, but they’re also so unfiltered and passionate; I’m embarrassed to say I haven’t written with such energy since. His later experiences are just as fun to read, and remind me of a few milestones in that evolving space: the way my MySpace profile suddenly fused my online “shadow” self to my physical IRL identity; the first virtual encounter with my future spouse (I’ll never forget the first tweets my husband and I exchanged); the way Instagram initially inspired the photographer in me, and then slowly sucked all of my creativity. As with a number of pieces I’ve read recently about the broken state of the web, this essay doesn’t really say anything about the internet we don’t already know—or already feel in our bodies, minds, and attention spans. But I always enjoy Chayka’s writing, and his thoughts here on what it was like to be online when “being online wasn’t yet a default state of existence” are relatable and served up with just the right amount of nostalgia. —CLR

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Joni Mitchell’s Best Album Is Turning Fifty. It’s Not Blue

KC Hoard | The Walrus | January 16, 2024 | 2,041 words

Joni Mitchell’s sixth album, Court and Spark, just turned 50. For The Walrus, KC Hoard shares their deep affinity for Mitchell’s music and its place in their life. For Hoard, Court and Spark marked Mitchell’s musical reinvention, where she distanced herself from her coffeehouse chanteuse image and the accessible, less complicated arrangements of her earlier work. —KS






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Thursday, January 18, 2024

Steroid to Heaven

Over the past two decades—originally fueled by the Crossfit phenomenon—weight training has become more popular among more people than ever before. That’s led to a great many physical transformations, as with Adrian Nathan West; it’s also led more than a few people to the door marked illicit gains. But as West details with humor and candor, we might be making too much of the “illicit” part. You don’t have to agree to enjoy the piece.

As a youth, I thought exercise was for morons and looked at my body as I did at a car: a thing to rely upon, its needs ignored until it gave out in a future too distant to bother contemplating. But then, over the course of a single school year, I had bacterial pericarditis and viral pleurisy bookended by two bouts of bronchitis, and I got scared that if I kept smoking and taking drugs, I might die. I started weightlifting because Henry Rollins did it and because, at five-eleven and 125 pounds, I had no aptitude for any actual sport. I took as gospel the prevailing prejudices about steroids, listed here in order of veracity: they give you acne, shrink your balls, make your hair fall out, give you heart disease, make you aggressive, shrivel your penis. What changed my thinking ten years or so later was, ironically, reading an article about the death of Andreas Münzer, an Austrian bodybuilder, from multiple organ failure in 1996. Der Spiegel published Münzer’s drug cycle in the weeks leading up to his last contest, when he was on a smorgasbord of injectable steroids, as well as insulin, growth hormone, ephedrine, IGF-1, and dozens of tablets a day of Halotestin, Dianabol, and Winstrol. Due to their hepatoxicity, orals are often considered more dangerous than injectables, and the Munich doctor who performed Münzer’s autopsy described half his liver as crumbly “like Styrofoam,” and the other half as “full of masses the size of ping-pong balls.”



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Lost Highway

Trucking is an industry in crisis. There’s a shortage of drivers: In 2021, a record 81,000 jobs went unfilled. But the problem isn’t a lack of people who can drive a truck, as Emily Gogolak explains in this reported essay. Rather, it’s the lifestyle: Truckers work insanely long hours for low pay, and they often live out of their cabs. So what kind of person wants to become a trucker today? Gogolak meets several candidates at a training school in Texas, who together offer a window into the death of the American dream:

Yanis was younger than the rest of us, but she was already stressed about her future. She wanted to be out of her parents’ place by winter, but that meant she needed to graduate from Changing Lanes and start filling her nearly empty bank account. Her family lived on ten acres of land in an unincorporated pocket of Travis County that was still mostly rural but was being eaten up fast by developers. Yanis reckoned that her father—who was also a truck driver—could sell the land for a couple million, but he didn’t want to. The problem was that they didn’t have utilities, which was why she wanted to make enough money to move out before the cold set in. It was weird being surrounded by a boomtown but disconnected from it, she told me: “We kind of live like in the old times.”

Yanis had worked as a cleaner at an airport lounge; at a UPS warehouse; as a security guard at an Apple corporate office in the hill country. Then she started working security at Tesla’s nearby Gigafactory. It took a full hour to walk across; when Elon Musk came to visit, his dog apparently had its own security guard. Yanis and her boyfriend, who also worked there, figured out that electricians made the best money at the factory, so they became electricians. In all of her work, she’d often been one of the few women. “You have to show them that you can do things better than them,” she said. “If you’re doing an outlet, the outlet has to look beautiful.” Ultimately, though, Yanis’s jobs have taught her about how the world works—that “the job that you can die on,” she told me, “is where they’re gonna pay you the most.



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A Hunger for Strangeness: A Cryptids Reading List

An illustration of people searching for and reading about Bigfoot, while a shadowy figure walks unnoticed in the background.

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Late one night many years ago, my sister was driving home through the leafy roads of South East England when a strange animal bounded into the headlights of her car and swiftly disappeared into a hedgerow. She was certain, she said, that it had been a wallaby—despite the fact that the kangaroo relative was native to Australia and Papua New Guinea and decidedly not native to Oxfordshire. Our reaction was about what you’d expect from a British family: politely skeptical. It had been dark, the encounter fleeting, and the human brain is decidedly fallible. Surely, then, she must have been mistaken.

My sister would eventually be vindicated when the existence of wild wallabies in the UK was confirmed and even captured on film. Yet, her experience isn’t too different from those who claim to have encountered cryptids, creatures whose existence remains a matter of debate. Yeti, Bigfoot, and the Loch Ness Monster are only the beginning; a small but committed community of cryptid hunters is dedicated to proving the existence of doubted beasts like the Mongolian Death Worm, the Honey Island Swamp Monster, and the Skunk Ape. 

This is not a quest without victories. In the early 20th century, tales of a fearsome giant lizard living on an inhospitable island in Indonesia were dismissed as folklore until Jacques Karel Henri van Steyn van Hensbroek, an impressively named Dutch lieutenant stationed on nearby Flores Island, investigated and returned with a photograph of the now-famous Komodo Dragon. Other animals to make the switch from supposed myth to firm reality include the duck-billed platypus, the giant squid, and the okapi (or forest giraffe).

Nevertheless, although attitudes may be slowly changing, cryptozoology—to give the field its proper name—is still considered a pseudoscience. So why do cryptid hunters continue to put their reputations on the line, and what other legendary beasts might we discover to be not so legendary after all? In an age when species extinction has reached alarming proportions, perhaps this quest to discover new life carries extra poignancy. The articles collected below offer tantalizing insight into both questions.

Desperately Seeking Mothman (Tara Isabella Burton, The Hedgehog Review, May 2020)

There’s so much to enjoy in this wonderful piece by Tara Isabella Burton, which provides both a fascinating overview of the history of cryptozoology and an insightful exploration of the psychology that drives it. Burton writes with compelling flair, drawing links between our enduring desire to uncover the undiscoverable and the perceived decrease in mystery and magic that has accompanied the modern age. She argues convincingly that interest in cryptids ties into our innate, if often subjugated, wish to believe in something “other,” something beyond the confines of a rational, predictable world. 

Burton also explores cryptozoology as reflected in what she describes as its “parallel and opposite”—the rise throughout the Renaissance of the Wunderkammern, a room kept in any learned gentleman’s house dedicated to the documentation and categorization of scientific specimens. I would go even further and argue that modern cryptozoology occupies a unique place between the realms of science and the magical. Ultimately, it’s a pursuit that hinges more on faith than logic. Yet, it also seeks to move a subject from imagination into reality. Would we be happier if Bigfoot were proven to exist? Or would it fade into the everyday, the commonplace, the explainable, to finally become something less than it ever was? Such are the questions that this excellent article engenders.

Like its Enlightenment-era forebears, contemporary cryptozoology is rooted in that same hunger for strangeness, and for an enchanted world. It’s telling that the contemporary iteration of the phenomenon saw its first major resurgence during the wider postwar optimism of 1950s—when Belgian zoologist Bernard Heuvelmans, often lauded as one of the forefathers of the field, published On the Track of Unknown Animals in 1955. (Heuvelmans also coined the terms cryptozoology and cryptid.) Featuring entries dedicated to the abominable snowman and Nandi bears alongside examinations of platypuses and gorillas, Heuvelmans’s book celebrates the potential of a world teeming with creatures the scientific record has not yet ossified into fact.

“The world is by no means thoroughly explored,” Heuvelmans writes in his introduction. “It is true that we know almost all its geography, there are no more large islands or continents to be discovered. But because a country is on the map it does not mean that we know all about its inhabitants. There are still more things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in Horatio’s philosophy.”1 Neither technological progress nor scientific expansion can expunge the delightful possibility that the abominable snowman (or Bigfoot, or the Mothman) might well be out there.

When Edmund Hillary Went in Search of the Yeti (Tom Ward, Atlas Obscura, February 2022)

This gripping tale takes us back to Nepal in 1960, and Tom Ward’s evocative prose does a splendid job of outlining the atmosphere that gripped a world still coming to terms with the repercussions of two devastating global wars. As Ward points out, one inadvertent result of the conflicts was that the public was used to hearing news from lands once considered intimidatingly remote, setting the stage for this first-class adventure story, which captured the imagination of people the world over. All such stories need a hero, a larger-than-life figure of courage and daring, and New Zealand mountaineer and philanthropist Sir Edmund Hillary fit the bill perfectly.

Seven years earlier, Hillary and Sherpa Tenzing Norgay had become the first climbers to reach the summit of Mount Everest, a feat for which Hillary was appointed Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire. (Coincidentally, news of the climber’s achievement reached England on the day of Queen Elizabeth II’s coronation.) Prior to that, Hillary had served in the Royal New Zealand Air Force during World War II as a navigator on Catalina amphibious aircraft. 

But in 1960, the mountaineer found himself on quite a different mission. Rumors of the existence of the Yeti (a.k.a. the Abominable Snowman) date back centuries, if not millennia, and Hillary was well aware of the Sherpas’ belief that such a creature truly existed. Nowadays, the Yeti has become a B-movie staple, slipping into the “enjoyable nonsense” category alongside the Loch Ness Monster. Not so in 1960; Hillary’s was a well-funded and highly skilled expedition that marked the passing of a more credulous and mysterious time.

When the race to conquer Everest heated up in the 1950s, so too did the number of alleged yeti sightings. Western audiences were hooked, eager for news of this evolutionary hangover halfway between man and beast. Perhaps it was comforting to think that there were beings beyond comprehension surviving at the ends of the wilderness and that, crucially, there were still enough wild places left to hold them.

He Asked the FBI to Analyze ‘Bigfoot’ Hair 40 Years Ago and Never Heard Back. Until Now. (Reis Thebault, The Washington Post, June 2019)

For all its reputation as a pseudoscience, cryptozoology relies on scientific methods to verify evidence, whether that be expert analysis of images and footprints or, as is the case in this story, DNA testing. This decades-spanning piece draws together two fascinating threads: the tantalizing possibility of uncovering undeniable proof, certified by the very gatekeepers who look down upon this field, and the stories of those who go to extraordinary lengths attempting to secure such a thing. 

Bigfoot also figures prominently in “The Truth Is Out There,” a recent issue of our sister publication, The Atavist.

Our protagonist here is cryptid hunter Peter Byrne, a man whose tireless questing since the 1970s has earned him a special place in the Bigfoot research community. While Byrne first encountered the legendary creature via bedtime stories as a child, his awareness blossomed into passion while stationed in India at the end of WWII; that’s when he met Nepalese people for whom the existence of Bigfoot was a given. Over his lifetime, Byrne has undertaken five expeditions into the Himalayas, spending a total of 38 months in the mountains.

It would be churlish not to admire such dedication, but cryptid hunting is a high-stakes game: struggling for funding while working in a maligned field, all in hopes of one day vindicating your obsession and elevating your name to the history books. Back in 1977, Byrne rolled the dice, sending a sample of suspected Bigfoot hair to the FBI and urging them to test it. After four decades, the FBI wrote back. If you don’t want to know what happens yet, you’re made of sterner stuff than I.

When Byrne arrived, he noticed the trees stood close together — far too narrow a space for something with broad shoulders and big feet to make a clean egress. And there, between three and five feet off the ground, snagged in the bark, he spotted the tuft of hair and piece of skin he hoped would bring him one step closer to his idée fixe, the sasquatch itself, a towering hominid of North American lore.

Chasing the Chupacabras (Asher Elbein, Texas Observer, October 2016)

Like many mass social phenomena, widespread panic comes in waves and can often affect communities and individuals in surprising ways. A single sighting of something strange or disturbing often snowballs into many more, with the story growing and mutating via a feedback loop, one fed by sensational media reports and eyewitnesses who are primed and nervous. Such situations are common and stretch back into recorded history. In early Victorian London, a mysterious creature who came to be known as Spring-Heeled Jack terrorized the night-time streets. In medieval Alsace, a bizarre “dancing sickness” spread throughout the city. In possibly the most famous example, a strange being dubbed Mothman haunted 1960s Point Pleasant, West Virginia. Among followers of paranormal news, there’s even a name for such events: flaps.

At their heart, such events are more about human psychology than hard science, and are no less fascinating for it. For proof, let us turn to the mid-1990s flap around the Chupacabra, a doglike creature whose penchant for slaying cattle gave it a name rooted in the Spanish words chupar (suck) and cabra (goat). Stories of the Chupacabra persist, providing a fascinating example of how modern legends circulate and grow. Countless attempts have been made to document proof of this disturbing beast, and with many more surely to come. Asher Elbein’s excellent feature does a fine job of telling the tale.

But the chupacabra wasn’t always a resident of the Lone Star State, and it didn’t always look like a dog. In the 21 years since the first supposed sightings of the creature, it has been a spine-backed alien, a winged kangaroo or a goblin, a predatory monkey or an unusually ambitious mongoose. Only one facet of the tale has remained constant: The chupacabra is out there in dark thickets and empty deserts, and it wants your livestock.

The Devil Went Down To Jersey (Frank Lewis, Philadelphia City Paper, October 1997)

Journalist Frank Lewis has a rich tapestry of material to draw from in this piece about one of our most enduring cryptids. The Jersey Devil (sometimes known as the Leeds Devil) likely originates in the legends of the Lenape, an indigenous people whose historical territory ranges across the northeastern United States. The Lenape called “it” M’Sing—a mysterious deer-like creature with leathery wings. The beast owes its modern twist to pre-Revolutionary America, and a popular folktale concerning a woman named Jane Leeds (often referred to as Mother Leeds) who, after discovering she was pregnant for the 13th time, cursed the child, which transformed into a strange, twisted and winged creature following its birth. By the early 19th century, the legend was ubiquitous throughout New Jersey. In 1859, the Atlantic Monthly published a detailed and evocative account, and waves of sightings continue to this day. (As do pop-culture portrayals: like many of the other creatures on this list, the Jersey Devil became the focus of a popular X-Files episode.)

What fascinates here is that such tales persist, transmitted from generation to generation, despite the rise of scientific skepticism. Perhaps in part that’s due to our need for community, and therefore communal stories and myths, which have traditionally brought people together and fostered a sense of collective belonging. But can that explain why New Jersey residents continue to have close encounters with the Devil? Whatever you might believe, this splendid article is full of sumptuous detail and quotes drawn from across the long life of Jersey’s own cryptid, and will surely have you chasing down further articles in search of answers.

The nearly 6-foot-tall beast stood no more than 3 feet away from her front bumper; she couldn’t see its feet, that’s how close they were. Its fine coat was all one color, a light brown or beige, like a camel, but it had the forward-leaning shape, short front legs and long, thick tail of a kangaroo. Short, rounded horns sprouted from its head, small wings from its back. To this day, she can’t fully describe the face; the expression was almost human.

“It looked right at me,” she says. “He just looked like a sad little thing. I felt sorry for it, whatever it was.”


Chris Wheatley is a writer and journalist based in Oxford, UK. He has too many guitars, too many records, and not enough cats.

Editor: Peter Rubin
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Wednesday, January 17, 2024

An American Girlhood in the Ozempic Era

Things are changing fast in the field of obesity, and a new generation of children are facing treatment choices that their parents never had. But are more options always better? It’s a question Lisa Miller takes great pains to explore whilst tracing one family’s decisions over several years. A considered, informative piece on a drug that has had its fair share of headlines.

But if Maggie was sheltered from the onslaught beyond her small town, her mother was not. Erika has also struggled with her weight her entire life and feels the experience defined her; she has done everything she can to reassure Maggie that she is beautiful as she is and to protect her from the casual cruelty of people she encounters. But she also knew from the time her daughter was young that there was something different about her. In a small, dark part of herself, Erika feared that, because of her parenting or her habits or her own history with food, she was the one at fault. Even now, after all the interventions — the doctors, the fighting with insurance companies, the overhaul of the family fridge — this worry has not left her. It has only evolved, because Erika knows her neighbors and people in the world beyond have things to say not just about Maggie’s body but about the treatments she has chosen for it, too.



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