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Notice how your breath feels moving in and out.
Only an asthmatic may fully ever understand how beautiful your first deep or semi-deep breath feels after laboring in panic for whatever oxygen your lungs have been willing to suck in only moments prior.
They don't know that there are mothers at the table next to us, or down the block, or across the world who aren't having a day of struggle, a day when their children's every breath feels like a burden to be dealt with.
Your fingers may resemble Bart Simpson's by the time you drag yourself onto the nightbus, and every breath feels like one step closer to having a perpetually-wrecked ribcage, but you've been so busy chuffing on increasingly ratty cigs that you won't have had the time to drink or dabble anyway.
Similar(56)
Every breath felt like agony.
Take a deep breath, feel the fear, do it anyway.
From then on, as the stage darkened, the groupings (lines of leaping flocks in flight) and gestures (grasping at shadows, listening to breath) felt charged and luminous.
And it does make one wonder why a woman who has never really paused to draw breath felt the need to add to her family once more by adopting – and not without difficulty – her youngest child, Malawi-born Mercy, last year.
Each breath felt like someone was driving a nail into my side.
I was tight all through my ribs and my breath felt shallow.
What's fine?" My breath felt like it was being pulled on a cord in and out of my chest.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com