“Why do
you only paint with blue?” he asked. The young woman dipped her hands in the
soapy water and rubbed away the dried acrylic and charcoal from her skin.
“Blue
can mean anything,” she replied with a soft voice and a crooked smile.
The man
took her place in front of the sink to clean his own hands as she stepped aside
to dry off. She placed her paintbrushes in their jars to air-dry for the
following artist that would come. Sometimes she liked to wet the brushes with
water and pretend to paint spirals and shapes on her skin like ancient tattoos;
it soothed her nerves.
“I
guess I don’t understand that. Blues depress me. There’s no energy or life to
it. It is cold and damp. I try to use as many colors as possible. Using only
blue doesn’t feel,” he paused, trying not to offend her tastes, “…realistic.”
“I love
color, don’t get me wrong, but blues feel more realistic to paint with than
anything else. The oceans are blue and cold and dark, but they are full of life
and their waves are full of power. The skies are blue during the day and the
night; the blues caress the clouds and the stars. We always look to the clouds
and the stars to dream and wonder at the world around us, and the blues embrace
those things like dear friends. The blues comfort me. Don’t be scared of them.”
They
took off their smocks and hung them on the wooden knobs by the door before
walking out and the woman continued.
“Blues
are realistic because sadness is realistic. I think it’s a happy color too but
if you can’t feel sadness at some point then how can you identify happiness? I
use blues in my paintings because blues don’t give a damn about what they’re
supposed to mean. The only one that cares about the meaning is the person who
looks at it.”
They
walked in silence through the heavy doors and out into the courtyard. Nearly
every person in the grassy square lit a cigarette and pulled their coats
closer. It was a beautiful, clear sky but the wind whistled through the coats
and cut into their bones. In twenty minutes a nurse would peek out and announce
it was time to return to the building. The man and woman began to weave between
the other patients and follow the short sidewalk path of the courtyard.
“Why
are you here?” he asked delicately and was surprised that she was looking at
him directly when he turned to her.
“I
don’t know…well I suppose I know. I didn’t know how to handle the world
anymore. I stopped seeing the blues. I could only see the gray and I was
scared.”
“You
have a habit of confusing me,” he laughed and she smiled in return.
“I have
a habit of confusing myself.” There was another gust of wind that made his
knees hurt and they walked to a bench in the shelter of the building before she
continued speaking. “Why are you here?”
The man
took a deep breath and scuffed the heels of his worn brown shoes before turning
to face her. He wasn’t very old, no more than thirty or so, but there were
times like this when he suddenly seemed eighty. She held her gaze patiently
while she waited for his answer.
“If we
are talking about colors still then I guess I’m here because my life became
black and white. The lines weren’t blurred anymore and I felt like I could keep
living like I was or simply…stop. I’ve always been able to see the hope and
figure out my next big plan to make me happy again but big plans don’t solve
problems. Now I know that facing your problems for what they really are is how
you find a solution.” He removed his rough hands from his pockets, despite the
bitter wind that nipped them with the cold, and examined them. “I’m tired of
working hard but holding onto my past. It makes the work harder. Do you
understand? I let everything slip through my fingers even though I do my best
to hold on to everything I care for.”
“I
understand.”
The
nurse called the patients back into the building and everyone immediately
relaxed as they walked through the heated entrance. More heavy doors were
opened and the ones behind them automatically locked shut. A small line began
to form to get fresh cups of weak decaf coffee in Styrofoam cups. A handful of
patients returned to their rooms and wouldn’t reemerge until the next meal time
or courtyard break.
The
woman grabbed a hot cup of decaf and headed back to her own room. She left the
door partially open, placed the coffee on the side table, and decided to lie
down on the stiff mattress to warm up.
There was no blue here, she thought.
There were only artificial colors flooded in harsh hospital lights that drowned
out any feeling or emotional response. There were whites, yellows, dull grays
and remnants of a shade of turquoise that had gone out of style forty years
prior. It was if all the colors patients could encounter in the hospital were
chosen to keep people in a subdued state. I
miss having an emotional response. I can’t be happy without finding the color.
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