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Eva Saulitis is a writer, teacher, and marine biologist who lives in Homer, Alaska. She is the author of two nonfiction books about whales and the poetry collection Many Ways to Say It. Along with her husband, she is the executive director of the North Gulf Oceanic Society, a nonprofit research and conservation organization.
There are many ways of not knowing, not seeing, and there are equally many ways of knowing, of coming to know deep in your body, embodying knowledge the way my ancestors embodied culture, the way the earth embodies language and spiritual belief and insult. Or maybe what I want to say is that it takes many ways of knowing to overcome your brain’s many refusals. To admit you know a thing like cancer resides — is seizing control — inside your body.
January 2017I’ve come to love this island. Hawaii has mostly been subdued by human habitation, but there are still pockets of wilderness, like this one. A trail from our land leads to where I’m sitting on a tablecloth beside the stream with my laptop. When I look at my computer screen, I see my reflection, in which my bald head is hidden by a scarf. I’ve had no hair for six months now, a constant reminder that I have breast cancer.
August 2015Has something we published moved you? Fired you up? Did we miss the mark? We’d love to hear about it.
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