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- 1From:The American Poetry Review (Vol. 52, Issue 1)In the spring of 2019, poet Matthew Kelsey suffered the loss of his mother. Less than a year later, he would lose his father to COVID-19. The following is a poem-interview between Keith Leonard (questions) and Matthew...
- 2From:Mind, Mood & Memory (Vol. 18, Issue 6)The act of forgetting is usually thought of in negative terms. We associate forgetting with cognitive decline and dementia. It's frustrating when we miss an appointment or can't recall information we used to be able to...
- 3From:Psychology Today (Vol. 54, Issue 4)Forgetting names, faces, or events is a universal human experience; even those who see their minds as steel traps struggle with memory lapses from time to time. Most consider these mental slip-ups to be annoyances at...
- 4From:Indian Life (Vol. 41, Issue 5)When I was five years old, my twelve-year-old cousin, who was a bully and who teased and tormented me without mercy, pushed me into the river. I couldn't swim and would have drowned but a man who was fishing nearby saw...
- 5From:Boulevard (Issue 106)Winner of the 2019 Boulevard Short Fiction Contest for Emerging Writers She sticks to the wall and drips, and no one knows that she is real. She materialized the day I noticed my spoons disappearing. It happens so...
- 6From:The American Poetry ReviewAlbert Goldbarth has published more than thirty books; his newest, The Now, is forthcoming in 2020 (University of Pittsburgh Press). He won the National Book Critics Circle award for Saving Lives (2001) and Heaven and...
- 7From:The American Poetry Review (Vol. 48, Issue 5)Denise Duhamel's most recent book of poetry is Scald (Pittsburgh, 2017). Blowout (Pittsburgh, 2013) was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. She is a Distinguished University Professor in the MFA...
- 8From:Mind, Mood & Memory (Vol. 15, Issue 1)It may come as no surprise, but recent research suggests that people with higher stress levels may struggle more with memory than those who are generally more relaxed. A study published in the American Academy of...
- 9From:Mind, Mood & Memory (Vol. 13, Issue 3)Forgetfulness--a part of aging as familiar as wrinkles and graying hair--can be a source of worry for many seniors. Is the growing tendency to forget words, have difficulty recalling names, or lose track of the car keys...
- 10From:Esquire (Vol. 165, Issue 4)IN LENIN'S TOMB, HIS LUCID ACCOUNT of the end of Soviet Russia, David Remnick uses as an epigraph a famous quote from Czech author Milan Kundera. "The struggle of man against power," Kundera wrote, "is the struggle of...
- 11From:Science News (Vol. 189, Issue 9)Sometimes forgetting can be harder than remembering. When people force themselves to forget a recently seen image, select brain activity is higher than when they try to remember that image. Forgetting is often a...
- 12From:Newsweek (Vol. 153, Issue 17)Byline: Claudia Kalb Can painful, unwanted memories be altered or even eradicated? That's the provocative question being raised by the emerging science of forgetting. Karim Nader sounds giddy as he recalls the day...
- 13From:Mind, Mood & Memory (Vol. 8, Issue 9)Absentmindedness is common in older people, according to a study of 105 healthy adults aged 65 to 92 published June 13, 2012 in Aging, Neuropsychology, and Cognition. Researchers asked study subjects to list the memory...
- 14From:The AtlanticByline: Jeffrey Goldberg Seth I believe that my brain has only limited space to store information, and I would like to clear it of, for instance, song lyrics that I don’t want to remember. Do you know any...
- 15From:Mind, Mood & Memory (Vol. 8, Issue 2)A study published in a recent issue of the Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology suggests that forgetting the reason for entering a room is a common occurrence with a plausible scientific explanation. Researchers...
- 16From:GPPatients forget up to 80 per cent of the advice from their GP, according to researchers. Elderly patients and those with high levels of anxiety or distress were most likely to have difficulty remembering what they...
- 17From:The Christian Century (Vol. 127, Issue 14)A HALF PHRASE from Augustine has challenged and inspired me for a half century: "God is like the nature he made." It appears as a virtual throwaway line, quoted in Jose Ortega y Gasset's History as a System (1941), in...
- 18From:Men's Health (Vol. 18, Issue 6)Being overweight or inactive can make you forgetful. Researchers at New York University studied 30 individuals and found that those who performed the worst on memory tests were also the most likely to suffer from...
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