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The Nobel laureate Seamus Heaney described our complicated relationship with aging parents in his poem “The Follower,” ostensibly about his own father, who had shoulders like sails, and Seamus, as a child, “tripping and falling” in his father’s wake. The poem ends, “But today / It is my father who keeps stumbling / Behind me, and will not go away.”
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Lifespan: The Revolutionary Science of Why We Age—and Why We Don't Have To
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