Ben Lerner—he of autofiction, he of 10:04 and The Topeka School—recently underwent open heart surgery. Judging from his remarkable essay about it in the new issue of NYRB, it didn’t weaken his ability to look deeply inward. To the contrary: he seems newly aware of his interior, in more ways than one.
It isn’t the pain that I need to describe for you; there was little pain. It is how I suddenly became aware of a space—the pleural space—inside my body that I did not previously know existed, that hadn’t existed until they pulled something out of it. It’s how I could feel the tube moving along the tissue, a shifting deep in my thorax where I previously had no sensory awareness at all, where I was never meant to have sensation, my interior becoming wrongly tangible. And it was as if only now, when the tube was being extracted, I experienced the violation of its insertion, and so these events transpired in the wrong order, or in no order, happening simultaneously; the extraction made present what I could not remember. One moment you’re in the OR, the next moment you’re in recovery, but the tubes and wires run between those experiences, and when they pull them, they tug some of the controlled trauma into consciousness.
More picks from NYRB
Art for Our Sakes
“Why should we go on making things?”
Made in the USA
“Pete Hegseth is the product of an essentially American ethos—which means we have no choice but to ask what to do with him, and what to do with ourselves.”
Whither the Nerd-Bully?
“Bill Gates was the monopolistic father figure who Silicon Valley’s young founders rebelled against—and, in so rebelling, became.”
Ever New
“In Beverly Glenn-Copeland’s music, the present moment is an astonishing, improbable gift.”
My Classroom Life
“The best way to learn something is to teach it.”
The Hardy Men
“Why is a right-wing press reissuing century-old adolescent mystery novels?”
