Ashes.
They have always been part of our lives. We sang of them in our nursery songs. We heard our mothers speak of a
princess who labored in cinders and dreamed of a prince. And as we grew, ash became less magical
and more mundane. It was in our
science lessons. We snickered to
hear that messy wood ash was needed to make soap. That seemed so wrong, a contradiction terms.
The years past and I found ash was needed to make so many
things. Cinder blocks are called
cinder blocks because they contain ash.
The ash makes them strong yet light: a perfect building material. And I learned about charcoal. I learned the silky beauty of writing
with a charred vine or the compressed stick.
The years past and I grew beyond drawing with charcoal and
focused on paint. One day I found a new black paint that
quickly became my favorite. The
color was so deep and dark. You
could fall into it and never return.
I wondered at the color’s name: Bone Black. I thought it a joke, for bones are off-white like
ivory. Bones are the color of old
lace… unless you burn them.
This is “Bone Black” a jacket for Catherine Fairchild. We were introduced to each other by Susannah Fox who interviewed Catherine about rare disease. She mailed me this jacket months
ago, but time had passed and yet the jacket hung within my closet. It hung on its hanger, the color of
bone beside jacket after jacket in black.
As I learned more about Catherine and her story I could see
why she would pick this color, this jacket. Catherine is the mother of two wonderful children: Ella and
Billy.
Ella was already a rosy-cheeked toddler when Billy was born
in 2002. The family was happy that
Ella would soon have a baby brother.
Catherine had a routine mid-term sonogram during her pregnancy and
noticed the report contained CPC codes.
She did not know what that represented so like any good e-patient she
registered for 48-hour JAMA subscription.
She found articles that explained those codes were soft markers for many
developmental disorders. She
then went through a more thorough sonogram that was inconclusive.
As she neared term Catherine grew concerned that the
pregnancy was not doing well. He
was not moving, as he should.
Catherine had another sonogram and was told that she would need a
C-section immediately. The
placenta was bad, amniotic fluid was gone and without intervention he would
not survive.
Billy was 5lbs at birth and within two weeks birthmarks
appeared on his back. She told her
pediatrician about the café-au-lait birthmarks. Could it be the sign of some
type of disorder? The doctor brushed off her concerns. BB continued to grow and meet his
milestones, but at three years his coordination was sufficiently poor that the
special education teacher at school said Billy should see a pediatric
neurologist.
Again, tests were inconclusive.
A year later, four year old Billy played really hard with a
group of boys and then began to limp.
He had a occupational therapy appointment the next day and the therapist
concurred with Catherine’s worries, there was something wrong with Billy. He was
x-rayed to determine if he broke a bone.
The x-rays determined Billy had lesions all over his
bones.
Billy has MAS (McCune-Albright Syndrome) a rare genetic
disease estimated to effect between 1 in 100,000 to 1 in 1,000,000. Characteristics of the disease include
café-au-lait marks on the skin, and deformities in the bone known as fibrous
dysplasia, and endocrine issues.
Many individuals with this disease suffer multiple bone breaks. Billy has had several major orthopedic
surgeries to address the problems with his bones.
Billy is doing well, though he spends a lot of time in a
wheel chair. He loves legos and
enjoys school. His mother supports
him in all his endeavors.
I painted her gown the color of bone. She stands tall and defiant as wind whips at her gown. Ella clings to her back and Billy is in her arms. Billy holds two oversize BB’s as though they are a baby’s rattle. Catherine holds scrolls that represent the law and information. She is e: empowered, engaged, and expert at the disease she is fighting. No wind can lift her off her mooring. She fights for her BB.
I am glad to know Catherine. I am happy to paint her thus, beautiful and defiant. I used very little of my favorite black
color in this painting. Her colors
are her own. Bone black is created
when bone is burnt at a low temperature, to get white the temperature must be
very high. The crucible purifies the
color.
Yes, I think I know why Catherine sent me this jacket in
this color.
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