https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/18/briefing/the-good-list-wordle-tulips.html
From Melissa:
There’s a quotation attributed to the poet Sylvia Plath that’s been popping up on my social media: “In March I’ll be rested, caught up and human.” It’s good, right? A prophecy for renewal.
I repeated it to myself during this frigid February, and then went to find the quotation in Plath’s papers. The words come from a 1953 letter: “Dearest mother,” she wrote. “Well, the event has come and gone, and I feel amazingly eager to plunge into the next five weeks of work so that when I take the pilgrimage to Yale in March I’ll be rested, caught up and human.”
My take: as a physician informaticist, technologist and aging human, our ongoing technology acceleration is both wondrous and deeply troubling.
Recently I read a book by Heather Haying, A Hunter-Gatherer’s Guide to the 21st Century, and her quote struck me as well:
When it rains in the mountains, stay out of the river.” — from a local farmer in South America
Yes, it was difficult for her to understand what the farmer was talking about: the mountains were many miles away! And yet a few minutes later the river swelled and became instantly dangerous. Sometimes, unless you’re a local, you don’t understand the dangers and the warning signs.
And she goes on to talk about Hyper-Change: change that is too fast for human brains to accommodate. We are living in the age of Hyper-change. It is exhausting. The FOMO (fear of missing out) is constantly in our ears.
When I look back over my writings and readings over the past 20 years, I have always thought “wow, things are moving so fast now, we can’t keep up.” I have been writing and thinking this for 30 years.
- 1995: Oh no! Our dictated and typed notes take too long to get in the chart!
- 1998: Oh no! CT wants us to look at test results on a PC!
- 1999: Oh no! PC’s are to costly to install in EVERY clinic!
- 2001: Oh no! Patients want to see test results immediately!
- 2003: Oh no! We have to switch EHR vendors!
- 2005: Oh no! We can’t install Allscripts quickly enough!
- 2009: Oh no! Paying for paper chart records is costly on top of an EHR!
- 2011: Oh no! We have to switch to Epic. We don’t have time to learn this!
- 2013: Oh no! Handwriting, scanning, typing, dictation. Writing notes sucks!
- 2014: Oh no! Speech recognition is better, but still sucks!
- 2016: Oh no! CT is forcing us to show all our progress notes to patients!
- 2020: Oh no! Pandemic and learning to do telehealth!
- 2021: Oh no! The Feds say we have to show patients results immediately!
- 2023: Oh no! These EHR quarterly upgrades keep breaking my workflow!
- 2026: Oh no! Everyone is using AI well except me!
And things keep accelerating, and then I look back fondly on 2 years ago and think “how quaint and peaceful that used to be.”
I don’t have a point, except, I certainly feel unsettled by generative AI, and the social media posts on “Look what I figured out! You’re an idiot if YOU haven’t done the same!”
Enough.
Thank you, Sylvia Plath for your words.
And to Melissa for resurfacing them for us.
March I’ll be rested, caught up and human.




