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Ed Yong is not here
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Ed Yong is not here
@edyong209
Science writer. Author of AN IMMENSE WORLD. Not on Twitter any more. Find me on Bluesky or through my newsletter: buttondown.email/edyong209.
Bay Area
buttondown.email/edyong209
Joined January 2009
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    Ed Yong is not here
    @edyong209
    Jul 27, 2023
    🛑I wrote about what “fatigue” really means for people with long COVID and ME/CFS, and why this profoundly debilitating symptom is so often misunderstood and trivialized. (This piece also covers PEM.) 1/
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    Fatigue Can Shatter a Person
    From theatlantic.com
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    Ed Yong is not here
    @edyong209
    Sep 30, 2022
    🧵Some personal news: I’m taking a 6-month sabbatical, starting now. These past 3 years have been the most professionally meaningful of my life, but they’ve also deeply broken me. The pandemic isn’t over, but after a long time spent staring into the sun, I need to blink. 1/
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    Ed Yong is not here
    @edyong209
    Aug 3, 2020
    🚨🚨Here’s the big piece I’ve been promising: an Atlantic cover story about the US’s catastrophic mishandling of the pandemic. It’s a full autopsy of what went wrong, every unattended weakness & unheeded warning, every festering wound & reopened scar. 1/
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    How the Pandemic Defeated America
    From theatlantic.com
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    Ed Yong is not here
    @edyong209
    Oct 25, 2021
    Me, logging on to this site:
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    Ed Yong is not here
    @edyong209
    Jun 11, 2021
    !!!!!!!!
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    The Pulitzer Prizes
    @PulitzerPrizes
    Jun 11, 2021
    Congratulations to @edyong209 of @TheAtlantic. #Pulitzer
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    Ed Yong is not here
    @edyong209
    Sep 12, 2022
    🚨I wrote about “brain fog”—one of the most common & disabling symptoms of long COVID (and many other pre-pandemic conditions), and one of the most misunderstood. Here’s what brain fog actually is, and what it’s like to live with it. 1/
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    One of Long COVID’s Worst Symptoms Is Also Its Most Misunderstood
    From theatlantic.com
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    Ed Yong is not here
    @edyong209
    Feb 24, 2022
    Replying to @jonathanchait
    Saying nothing at all is an option that is permanently available to you, and that I urge you to more frequently consider. The same goes for tagging me into your thoughts.
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    Ed Yong is not here
    @edyong209
    Aug 13, 2021
    2020: Can I go running? 2021: My brother is a fully vaxxed Scorpio who only lies and my roommate is an unvaccinated INTJ who only tells the truth; how do we attend a 124-person outdoor wedding across a river with a fox, a chicken, and a sack of grain, and only one mask?
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    Ed Yong is not here
    @edyong209
    Nov 15, 2020
    Here's a thing I want everyone to understand. There is a roughly 12-day lag between rising cases rising hospitalizations. So the 1.5 million (!!!) confirmed cases from the last 2 weeks have not yet factored into stories about packed emergency rooms. theatlantic.com/science/archiv…
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    Ed Yong is not here
    @edyong209
    Feb 16, 2022
    🚨I wrote about immunocompromised people—what they’ve been through, their frustrations, and their hopes. This is a plea to think about those who don’t get to be done with the pandemic, and to prioritize them as a matter of moral and medical urgency. 1/
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    The Millions of People Stuck in Pandemic Limbo
    From theatlantic.com
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    Ed Yong is not here
    @edyong209
    Jun 11, 2021
    Replying to @edyong209
    I’ll be splitting the prize money between everyone who worked on my pieces last year—every editor, copy editor, fact checker, artist, and more. Even when individuals win Pulitzers, their work depends on a community. I want to honor mine.
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    Ed Yong is not here
    @edyong209
    Dec 8, 2017
    "When scientists say bears are going extinct, I want people to realize what it looks like," says photographer Paul Nicklen. "Bears are going to starve to death."
    National Geographic
    nationalgeographic.com
    National Geographic
    Explore National Geographic. A world leader in geography, cartography and exploration.
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    Ed Yong is not here
    @edyong209
    May 4, 2020
    About those "murder hornets": Japanese honeybees defend themselves by swarming the hornets & vibrating their wing muscles. This is called "heatballing." It raises the temperature and CO2 levels inside the ball. The hornets cook and choke to death. <stares directly into camera>
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    Ed Yong is not here
    @edyong209
    Nov 18, 2021
    A little ray of joy in bleak times: Here's my corgi Typo, who turns 1 today, and is dressed for the occasion.
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