Dark Night, Whirlpools, and the Limits of Consolation
A meditation after Hafez on grief, uncertainty, and the limits of easy consolation.
Browse the field notes by date, topic, place, and memory.
A meditation after Hafez on grief, uncertainty, and the limits of easy consolation.
Along the vast arteries of the Amazon River, Indigenous societies have raised infants for millennia without what the modern world considers indispensable: diapers. This is not an absence born of…
A reflection on international childhood, independence, and the early-acquired cultural capital that shapes how children move through the world.
A meditation on Istanbul, memory, wandering, and the strange freedom of exile without nostalgia for return.
It Is Easy to Learn to Speak English Poorly by Yehuda Kovesh MD (London), FRAI (London) A Frenchman’s Remark A French academician once observed: “English is a language that is…
A morning walk in Cochin becomes a field note on sea air, faith, health, and everyday public life.
A multilingual reflection on Iran, hospitality, exile, and the ache of belonging from afar.
A political and anthropological reflection shaped by Suriname, migration, medicine, and the pull of difficult places.
A Miami food memory that connects Cuban exile, restaurants, nostalgia, and the soul of Havana.
A reflection on Fort Cochin, interdenominational life, and the quiet coexistence of many faiths.
A historical note on the origins of the word assassin, moving through Bernard Lewis, Amin Maalouf, and medieval memory.
A personal reflection on travel as a life priority, offered as one person’s path rather than advice for everyone.