Knot Theory

Q4 Social Sciences Dialogue Pub Date : 2023-07-01 DOI:10.5406/15549399.56.2.06
Aurora Golden-Appleton
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A novel virus emerged in a bustling port a world away two months before my seventeenth birthday, and now I'm here at 5:21 on a Saturday morning. Life comes at you fast.A month ago, you were probably waking up to make breakfast for your three kids. Two weeks ago, you arrived here, with tubes galore snaking around your bed to pump medicines into your blood and blow oxygen into your flared nostrils. Last week, the doctor held your husband on the phone as your oxygen levels dropped lower and lower, a nurse silenced the alarm that's been ringing in her head for the last ten months, and they inserted a tube down your throat to help you breathe.Today, a team of six of us crowded into your room, where you were lying face down on the plastic mattress, positioned to relieve the pressure on your inflamed lungs. We packed sheets onto your body before counting to three and moving fluidly to flip you to your back for a few hours of respite from “adult tummy time.”The respiratory therapist hit “Three!” and that's when we met. I didn't want to, but I winced. Bloated and twisted—there's still something so viscerally shocking to me about seeing the face of a really, really sick human being. Your face.You have a team of world-class clinicians who will titrate your medicines and do the work for and in behalf of your lungs. And a family who will skip breakfast, lunch, and dinner today as a collective demonstration of their faith and love for you. What I am here to share with you is my time. My job right now is detangling deaconess, at one with the standard-issue plastic comb I grabbed from the supply room before suiting up and entering your world.And so, a few weeks into your brutally long disease course, I find myself sitting on a stool at your bedside, talking to you as I comb through your tangled ICU crown. I start at the bottom and work upward in sections, wetting your hair with detangler and teasing apart knot after knot.In mathematics, we talk about knots as a kind of closed loop, two ends married together and rendered inseparable. Unlike a tied shoelace, by definition, these knots can't be undone.But to be connected to other people so deeply that we can hold in our hands another's life, or find our own destiny entangled in so many others’—this represents our deepest, most human vulnerability. As we ache for understanding, security, and stability in the midst of this global whirlwind, coworkers, leaders, and friends push back against the political: God works in mysterious ways. Viruses, too. But people? People are predictable, safe, separate. They tell themselves that. We tell ourselves that.The virus made it here because the world is ineffably connected. You are lying in this bed because we forgot that it is. I meet you with my hands on your head, linking us in a narrative only I will ever write. In seeing you, I commit to restoring that connection.The miracle that is subsequently enacted will not save your life, but as neat, damp waves of red hair take shape and fall down your shoulders, I can see the life in you.A knot is described by its number of crossings, and where they occur.In a different life, we never would have met. But in this one, every tangle I unravel draws our humanity closer.The nurse slips silently and expertly around your bed, adjusting the drips we hope are keeping you comfortable. Together, we wash your body with warm wipes and drape you in a fresh gown. We exchange a knowing glance that holds as many layers as our protective garb.I pour your now-smooth hair into a final ponytail. It's much like the one in the photo your family chooses for the obituary I'll read in a few weeks’ time.Some knots can't be undone. These are the most important kinds.This essay reflects the author's authentic experience and recollection. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

A knot can be a beautiful thing. A knot can reveal truths about how the world works. Some people are so enraptured by knots, they dedicate their lives to studying them.I'm devoting no energy to the mathematical grandeur of knots as I pull a brush through my bedraggled hair in quick strokes. There's not enough light to imagine much of anything at 4:00 a.m., when I awaken for work. My hair goes into a simple ponytail, and a stretchy headband holds everything in place. Any glimmer of aesthetic creativity is decisively stifled by the knowledge that I'll soon be donning a rather unfashionable N95 mask for thirteen hours.I pull the front door closed, hit shuffle on today's Taylor Swift playlist, and wend a solitary two-mile sidewalk route to my hospital flush with the Wasatch Mountains. A novel virus emerged in a bustling port a world away two months before my seventeenth birthday, and now I'm here at 5:21 on a Saturday morning. Life comes at you fast.A month ago, you were probably waking up to make breakfast for your three kids. Two weeks ago, you arrived here, with tubes galore snaking around your bed to pump medicines into your blood and blow oxygen into your flared nostrils. Last week, the doctor held your husband on the phone as your oxygen levels dropped lower and lower, a nurse silenced the alarm that's been ringing in her head for the last ten months, and they inserted a tube down your throat to help you breathe.Today, a team of six of us crowded into your room, where you were lying face down on the plastic mattress, positioned to relieve the pressure on your inflamed lungs. We packed sheets onto your body before counting to three and moving fluidly to flip you to your back for a few hours of respite from “adult tummy time.”The respiratory therapist hit “Three!” and that's when we met. I didn't want to, but I winced. Bloated and twisted—there's still something so viscerally shocking to me about seeing the face of a really, really sick human being. Your face.You have a team of world-class clinicians who will titrate your medicines and do the work for and in behalf of your lungs. And a family who will skip breakfast, lunch, and dinner today as a collective demonstration of their faith and love for you. What I am here to share with you is my time. My job right now is detangling deaconess, at one with the standard-issue plastic comb I grabbed from the supply room before suiting up and entering your world.And so, a few weeks into your brutally long disease course, I find myself sitting on a stool at your bedside, talking to you as I comb through your tangled ICU crown. I start at the bottom and work upward in sections, wetting your hair with detangler and teasing apart knot after knot.In mathematics, we talk about knots as a kind of closed loop, two ends married together and rendered inseparable. Unlike a tied shoelace, by definition, these knots can't be undone.But to be connected to other people so deeply that we can hold in our hands another's life, or find our own destiny entangled in so many others’—this represents our deepest, most human vulnerability. As we ache for understanding, security, and stability in the midst of this global whirlwind, coworkers, leaders, and friends push back against the political: God works in mysterious ways. Viruses, too. But people? People are predictable, safe, separate. They tell themselves that. We tell ourselves that.The virus made it here because the world is ineffably connected. You are lying in this bed because we forgot that it is. I meet you with my hands on your head, linking us in a narrative only I will ever write. In seeing you, I commit to restoring that connection.The miracle that is subsequently enacted will not save your life, but as neat, damp waves of red hair take shape and fall down your shoulders, I can see the life in you.A knot is described by its number of crossings, and where they occur.In a different life, we never would have met. But in this one, every tangle I unravel draws our humanity closer.The nurse slips silently and expertly around your bed, adjusting the drips we hope are keeping you comfortable. Together, we wash your body with warm wipes and drape you in a fresh gown. We exchange a knowing glance that holds as many layers as our protective garb.I pour your now-smooth hair into a final ponytail. It's much like the one in the photo your family chooses for the obituary I'll read in a few weeks’ time.Some knots can't be undone. These are the most important kinds.This essay reflects the author's authentic experience and recollection. Out of respect for patient privacy, identifying details about patients have been modified.
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纽结理论
结可以是一件美丽的东西。一个结可以揭示世界如何运转的真相。有些人对结非常着迷,他们一生都在研究结。我没有把精力花在数学上的伟大结上,而是用梳子快速地梳着我凌乱的头发。凌晨4点,当我起床去工作的时候,没有足够的光线来想象任何事情。我把头发扎成一个简单的马尾,用一个有弹性的发带把所有的东西固定好。一想到我很快就要戴上一个相当不时髦的N95口罩13个小时,任何一丝审美创造力都被彻底扼杀了。我关上前门,按下今天泰勒·斯威夫特(Taylor Swift)的播放列表,独自沿着两英里长的人行道前往我的医院,与瓦萨奇山脉(Wasatch Mountains)齐平。在我17岁生日的前两个月,一个繁忙的港口出现了一种新型病毒,而现在我在这里,在一个周六的早上5点21分。生活来得很快。一个月前,你可能正在起床为你的三个孩子做早餐。两周前,你来到这里,床上挂着大量的管子,把药物泵进你的血液,把氧气吹进你张开的鼻孔。上周,当你的氧气水平越来越低时,医生抱着你的丈夫打电话,一位护士平息了过去十个月来一直在她脑海中响起的警报,他们把一根管子插进你的喉咙,帮助你呼吸。今天,我们六个人挤进了你的房间,你脸朝下躺在塑料床垫上,这样可以减轻你发炎的肺部的压力。我们把床单盖在你的身上,然后数到三,然后流畅地把你翻转过来,让你从“成人俯卧时间”中休息几个小时。呼吸治疗师按了“三!”就在那时,我们相遇了。我不想,但我畏缩了。臃肿和扭曲——当我看到一个病得很重的人的脸时,仍然会发自内心地感到震惊。你的脸。你有一个世界级的临床医生团队,他们会滴定你的药物,为你的肺做这项工作。一个不吃早餐、午餐和晚餐的家庭,作为他们对你的信仰和爱的集体证明。我在这里与你们分享的是我的时间。我现在的工作是整理女执事,用的是我在穿上衣服进入你的世界之前从补给室拿的标准塑料梳子。所以,在你残酷漫长的病程几周后,我发现自己坐在你床边的凳子上,一边和你说话,一边梳理你纠结的重症监护室王冠。我从底部开始,分节向上梳,用卷发器把头发弄湿,一个接一个地梳理。在数学中,我们把结看作是一种闭环,两端结在一起,变得不可分割。不像系好的鞋带,从定义上讲,这些结是解不开的。但是,与他人的联系如此之深,以至于我们可以将他人的生命掌握在自己的手中,或者发现自己的命运与他人的命运纠缠在一起——这代表了我们最深、最人性的弱点。当我们在这场全球旋风中渴望理解、安全和稳定时,同事、领导和朋友们却反对政治:上帝以神秘的方式工作。病毒。但人呢?人们是可预测的,安全的,独立的。他们这样告诉自己。我们这样告诉自己。病毒之所以出现在这里,是因为世界是紧密相连的。你躺在这张床上是因为我们忘了这一点。我遇见你,我的手放在你的头上,把我们联系在一个只有我才会写的故事里。看到你,我承诺恢复这种联系。随后发生的奇迹并不能挽救你的生命,但当你那整齐、潮湿的红发在你的肩膀上成形并垂下时,我能看到你身上的生命。一个结是通过它的交叉点的数量和它们发生的位置来描述的。如果换一种生活,我们就不会相遇。但在这部电影中,我解开的每一个谜团都拉近了我们的人性。护士悄无声息地熟练地绕着你的床打点滴,我们希望能让你感到舒适。我们一起用温暖的湿巾清洗你的身体,给你穿上一件干净的长袍。我们交换了一个会意的眼神,这眼神就像我们的防护服一样有多层含义。我把你光滑的头发梳成最后一个马尾。这张照片很像你家人为几周后我将读到的讣告选择的照片。有些结是解不开的。这些是最重要的种类。这篇文章反映了作者的真实经历和回忆。出于对患者隐私的尊重,对患者的身份信息进行了修改。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Dialogue
Dialogue Social Sciences-Development
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
39
期刊介绍: Dialogue is the official journal of the Canadian Philosophical Association. Its purpose is to publish high quality peer-reviewed scholarly articles, book symposia, critical notices, and book reviews in English and in French, in support of the Association"s mandate to promote philosophical scholarship and education. It is open to contributions in all branches of philosophy and from any philosophical perspective. Readers include professional teachers of philosophy, graduate students, and others with an interest in the field. Published for the Canadian Philosophical Association
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