"In the end, I learned two things about the long-term effects of . One is that a child's death is disorienting. The human mind is wired to find patterns and attach meanings, to associate things that are alike, to generalize from one example to another, in short, to make sense of things. Your mind could no more consciously stop doing this than your heart could consciously stop beating. But children's deaths make no sense, have no precedents, are part of no pattern; their deaths are unnatural and wrong. So parents fight their wiring, change their perspectives, and adjust to a reality that makes little sense. The other thing I learned is that letting go of a child is impossible. ..."
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Non-fiction authors from the United StatesEducators from the United StatesWomen academics from the United StatesScience authors from the United StatesJohns Hopkins University faculty
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Ann Finkbeiner
(born 1943) is an American science journalist, known for the . Her book reviews have appeared in ', ', and '. She has also written three books and contributed to ', ', ', ', ', ', and '. For two decades, she was a teacher and director for a graduate science-writing program at .
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