SAD DADS
The New Yorker|May 08, 2023
How the National captures the unmagnificent lives of adults
AMANDA PETRUSICH
SAD DADS

Last fall, the National débuted a new piece of merchandise: a black zippered sweatshirt featuring the words “SAD DADS” in block letters. The band—which formed in 1999, in Brooklyn—was lampooning its reputation as a font of midlife ennui, the sort of rudderless melancholy that takes hold when a person realizes that the dusty hallmarks of American happiness (marriage, children, a job in an office) aren’t a guarantee against despair. For more than two decades, this has been the National’s grist: not the major devastations but the strange little ache that feels like a precondition to being human. No amount of Transcendental Meditation, Pilates, turmeric, rose quartz, direct sunlight, jogging, oat milk, sleep hygiene, or psychoanalysis can fully alleviate that ambient sadness. Part of it is surely existential—our lives are temporary and inscrutable; death is compulsory and forever—but another part feels more quotidian and incremental, the slow accumulation of ordinary losses. Maybe there’s a person you once loved but lost touch with. A friend who moved to a new town. An apple tree that stood outside your bedroom window, levelled to make way for broadband cable. An old dog. A former colleague. We are always losing, or leaving, or being left, in ways both minor and vast. “The grief it gets me, the weird goodbyes,” Matt Berninger, the band’s vocalist, sings on “Weird Goodbyes,” a recent song featuring Justin Vernon, of Bon Iver. Berninger steels himself to confront the next loss: “Memorize the bathwater, memorize the air/There’ll come a time I’ll wanna know I was here.”

Bu hikaye The New Yorker dergisinin May 08, 2023 sayısından alınmıştır.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.

Bu hikaye The New Yorker dergisinin May 08, 2023 sayısından alınmıştır.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.

THE NEW YORKER DERGISINDEN DAHA FAZLA HIKAYETümünü görüntüle
SUBJECT AND OBJECT
The New Yorker

SUBJECT AND OBJECT

What happened when Lillian Ross profiled Ernest Hemingway.

time-read
10+ dak  |
February 17-24, 2025 (Double Issue)
ROYAL FLUSH
The New Yorker

ROYAL FLUSH

The fall of red.

time-read
10+ dak  |
February 17-24, 2025 (Double Issue)
Roz Chast on George Booth's Cartoons
The New Yorker

Roz Chast on George Booth's Cartoons

There's almost nothing I like more than a laughing fit. It is a non-brain response, like an orgasm or a sneeze.

time-read
2 dak  |
February 17-24, 2025 (Double Issue)
CHUKA
The New Yorker

CHUKA

I have always longed to be known, truly known, by another human being. Sometimes we live for years with yearnings that we cannot name.

time-read
10+ dak  |
February 17-24, 2025 (Double Issue)
Rachel Aviv on Janet Malcolm's "Trouble in the Archives"
The New Yorker

Rachel Aviv on Janet Malcolm's "Trouble in the Archives"

As Janet Malcolm worked on \"Trouble in the Archives,\" a two-part piece about prominent psychoanalysts who disagreed about Freud, she began a correspondence with Kurt Eissler, the head of the Sigmund Freud Archives.

time-read
3 dak  |
February 17-24, 2025 (Double Issue)
PERSONAL HISTORY - A VISIT TO MADAM BEDI
The New Yorker

PERSONAL HISTORY - A VISIT TO MADAM BEDI

I was estranged from my own mother, so a friend tried to lend me his.

time-read
10+ dak  |
February 17-24, 2025 (Double Issue)
AMERICAN CHRONICLES - WAR OF WORDS
The New Yorker

AMERICAN CHRONICLES - WAR OF WORDS

Editors, writers, and the making of a magazine.

time-read
10+ dak  |
February 17-24, 2025 (Double Issue)
LIVE FROM NEW YORK
The New Yorker

LIVE FROM NEW YORK

A new docuseries commemorates fifty years of \"Saturday Night Live.\"

time-read
6 dak  |
February 17-24, 2025 (Double Issue)
TANGLED WEB
The New Yorker

TANGLED WEB

An arachnophobe pays homage to the spider.

time-read
10+ dak  |
February 17-24, 2025 (Double Issue)
TROUBLE IN PARADISE
The New Yorker

TROUBLE IN PARADISE

Mike White's mischievous morality plays.

time-read
10+ dak  |
February 17-24, 2025 (Double Issue)