times to tolerate nearness and even, when well-rested, to listen.
In general I felt besieged, my defenses walled up around me, but every now and then something in the fall of words would strike. Iâd feel my throat clench in grief or recognition, be on the brink of tears and then not be.
At those timesâitâs hard to describe and I feel like a fool even tryingâI didnât understand why emotion was overwhelming me but I also didnât waste time belaboring the question. I had distinct sensations and I stilled everything to feel them: sometimes I thought I was being cut bloodlessly, cut so that a clear, frigid air entered me and the rest of the outside followed; or possibly I spilled out, it may have been the other way around. Iâd feel as though I had the long view, past the end of my life, past the horizon, dispersing into ether.
I loved that feeling the way a drug might be loved, I think, quick as it was, freeingâbut also with an icy burn, a searing touch I imagined as the cold of space and couldnât stand for long. There was the euphoria of ascent, the vertigo of height.
Then the feeling would vanish abruptly. Iâd just be there, in my house or on the street or in a store, wherever, with Lena. And Iâd be desperate to see her clear eyes gazing at me with no interferenceâto be alone with her instead of in the company of slime molds, cyanobacteria genomics, cuneiform or the dancing of bees.
And finally it wasnât the substance or character of the voice I resented but its proximityâthe fact that it was so close, and that it never ceased. I urgently wanted to be rid of the torrent of sound and image, the stream of convolved murmurings that often evoked either oppressive problems or, at the very least, the broad dramatic canvas of a universe that went on forever beyond our cozy walls. What I wished for was my child by herself, the child Iâd counted on only with meâthe two of us in peace and privacy.
I wanted the normal pleasures of babies, the smell of her soft cheek against my face, to hold her in my lap at bedtime and be able to read picture books to her without hearing, as I read, the constant burble of a parallel story.
But I adjusted, for the most part. I felt I knew the voice for the invention that it was, unconscious, a product of haywire neurology; albeit with some resistance, with some anxiety, Iâd learned to live around it.
And then that changed.
WE WERE HAVING a rare family moment. One of Nedâs affairs had just ended in a mildly humiliating way (I figured out later) and at the same time heâd had a major setback at workâfailed at a takeover of a small company that made some minor machine part for shrimp trawlers. Heâd flown in that afternoon from Dutch Harbor and was home for dinner, albeit with the crabby attitude of someone whoâs racking his brain but just canât think of somewhere else to be. I stood at the stove cooking as the baby sat in her high chair eating spinach puree and cheese; as always, in those days, the voice was droning on in the background.
âTurn off that racket, for Chrissake,â said Ned irritably, before heâd finished his first drink.
At first I didnât know what he was talking about. I was accustomed to talking over the noise in the background when I had company.
âTurn what off?â I asked, and looked around me as if to see the source.
âThat AM radio, that shock-jock shit youâre listening to,â he said.
I cocked my head and caught a few obscenities. The voice didnât shy away from coarse invective: this piece must have been some standup routine, a foulmouthed rant. It liked to take a run through those, from time to time. I was pretty sure the FCC wouldnât have let those words onto the airwaves and got distracted for a second thinking Ned shouldâve realized that too.
Then I realized the implications of what he had saidâthe sheer