When Breath Becomes Air
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Read between September 23 - September 23, 2025
7%
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Why was I so authoritative in a surgeon’s coat but so meek in a patient's gown?
18%
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I could either study meaning or I could experience it.
41%
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When there’s no place for the scalpel, words are the surgeon’s only tool.
53%
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You can’t ever reach perfection, but you can believe in an asymptote toward which you are ceaselessly striving.
54%
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Instead of being the pastoral figure aiding a life transition, I found myself the sheep, lost and confused.
59%
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I began to realize that coming in such close contact with my own mortality had changed both nothing and everything. Before my cancer was diagnosed, I knew that someday I would die, but I didn’t know when. After the diagnosis, I knew that someday I would die, but I didn’t know when. But now I knew it acutely. The problem wasn’t really a scientific one. The fact of death is unsettling. Yet there is no other way to live.
75%
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Science may provide the most useful way to organize empirical, reproducible data, but its power to do so is predicated on its inability to grasp the most central aspects of human life: hope, fear, love, hate, beauty, envy, honor, weakness, striving, suffering, virtue.
76%
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Human knowledge is never contained in one person. It grows from the relationships we create between each other and the world, and still it is never complete.
88%
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When you come to one of the many moments in life where you must give an account of yourself, provide a ledger of what you have been, and done, and meant to the world, do not, I pray, discount that you filled a dying man’s days with a sated joy, a joy unknown to me in all my prior years, a joy that does not hunger for more and more but rests, satisfied. In this time, right now, that is an enormous thing.