I stopped believing the lab results were the whole truth
When the instruments say you are fine, but your nervous system is screaming, the paper is the thing that is broken.
River N. spends his Tuesdays looking for things that are intentionally hidden. As a playground safety inspector, he is less interested in the bright primary colors of the plastic slides and more concerned with the internal integrity of the “S-hooks” and the specific compression rates of the wood chips under the swings.
He once told me that a bolt can look perfectly galvanized, shiny as a new nickel, while the interior has been hollowed out by a decade of unseen vibrations. The surface is a liar. It’s a professional hazard for him; he walks through the world expecting the most stable-looking structures to be the ones most likely to buckle under a child’s weight. He doesn’t look at what is there; he looks for the evidence of what is missing.
The Verdict of the White Coat
I think about River often when I look at the medical charts from . The winter had been particularly brutal, a dry, biting cold that seemed to suck the very soul out of the air. My skin wasn’t just dry; it was angry. It was a weeping, stinging landscape of micro-fissures that made even the act of washing my face
