When I was a
very small child, I would walk three blocks with my grandfather to Rexall’s
Drug. He would walk slowly in his
cowboy boots and spit chaw into the weeds beside the path. He would tell me
tales of long ago. I would scamper
beside him like a puppy, my bare feet skimming the pavement as I circled around
him. We would enter Rexall’s Drug
and he would buy me a soda pop in a glass bottle. I would relish the cold drink
and trace my finger upon the beads of perspiration on the glass. I would wait patiently as he joked with
the shop-keep. One day near the
register, I noticed this small blue lettered chipboard sign covered with little
red paper flowers. I asked grandpa
if I could have one of the flowers.
He purchased it for me and as I admired it in all of its crepe paper
glory, he told me, “Someone died for that.” I looked up at my grandfather in confusion. He opened the door and ambled down the
path with his boots clopping upon the pavement and continued. “I was born in 1907. When I was a boy
there was a war and many soldiers died.
After that war, they started making those poppies. Everyone of those
poppies is a dead person.”
I twirled the
pretty little flower in my hand and thought of death.
A few years
later I saw the Wizard of Oz on television for the first time. I sat amazed to watch a black and white
film became a color film. I had never seen that happen before. But I became very concerned when
Dorothy entered the poppy field and went to sleep. I was never certain Dorothy survived the field. Part of me always wondered. Did Dorothy
die at that moment? She was so
young, only a child, but I knew children die just as assuredly as young
soldiers die in poppy fields.
Dennis Wagner is
the Co-Director of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation Group (CMMI)
initiative named Partnership for Patients. I spoke to him recently and asked him if he would join The
Walking Gallery and he said he would.
He thought about his jacket concept and wanted to focus on organ
donation.
From 2003 to 2007
Dennis lead a national initiative called Organ Donation Breakthrough
Collaborative. This collaborative
was designed to gather best practices from hospitals that had high donation
rates and spread this knowledge to other hospitals in order to save lives.
During this
initiative he met a mother named Susan McVeigh Dillon. Susan’s 14-year-old son Michael
was badly injured during a climbing accident. It was determined that he would never regain brain
function. She asked the hospital
about organ donation. They were not
experienced with a non-heart-beating donation and therefore informed Susan that
Michael was not able to be a donor.
Prior to the 1970’s all organ donations were non-heart-beating
donations. In the 1970’s the new
standard of death was brain death; the non-heart-beating donation method fell
into disuse. Susan demanded her son be given a chance and though she was
undergoing a great personal loss she fought for Michael’s chance to give life. The hospital contacted the Gift of Life Donor Program and working as a team they were able to complete Michael’s
donation. Susan and Michael’s
story inspired hundreds of hospital teams to create protocols to accept such
donations and lead to thousands of recipients receiving needed organs.
So within this painting, the classic tin man hands his non-beating heart (a clock without hands) to the surgeon. He wants to save another’s life even if his own is forfeit.
In the center of
this painting is a very special girl.
Her name is Alexa. Her
mother is Monica Kersting. Monica supports organ donation through art and
advocacy on her website Alexa's Hope. Monica is unlike many in
this space in that she advocates even though her daughter died while on the national organ donation waiting list. Alexa was sick for
many years and desperately needed a lung transplant. When she was only
14-years-old, time ran out for Alexa. So Alexa stands within this painting with
her hourglass in hand and every grain of sand has fallen. She smiles her lovely smile and her
eyes sparkle. She is gone.
Time ran out.
Time ran out.
Behind her is a field of poppies, they stretch as far as the eye can see. Every one of those flowers represents someone who died. But because of the work of people like Dennis, Susan and Monica, that death also represents lives saved.
HI,
ReplyDeleteBeautiful panting!!!I love this painting.hanks for sharing this painting.
Cowboy Boot Shot Glass
My wife and I moved from California to Massachusetts and my wife brought a purchased copy of her medical records which she turned over to her new primary physician. Now we are transferring again and the office refuses to give us back the records we loaned them without paying a 50 dollar copy fee. We're not asking for the records they compiled, just the ones we loaned them.
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