In his fascinating
book An Anthropologist on Mars (Knopf, 1995), Oliver Sacks relates
seven paradoxical tales of unusual neurological conditions and how the patients
who suffered from them adapted mentally and emotionally. In one of these narratives,
he tells of a successful 65-year-old artist who had lost his ability to see
color.
"Mr.
I. could hardly bear the changed appearances of people (like
animated gray statues') any more than he could bear his own appearance
in the mirror...He saw people's flesh, his wife's flesh, his own
flesh, as an abhorrent gray... As the months went by, he particularly
missed the brilliant colors of spring he had always loved
flowers, but now he could distinguish them by shape or smell. The
blue jays were brilliant no longer; their blue, curiously, was now
seen as pale gray... He could no longer see the clouds in the sky,
their whiteness, or half-whiteness as he saw them, being scarcely
distinguishable from the azure...
Fixed and ritualistic practices and positions had to be adopted at the
table; otherwise he might mistake the mustard for the mayonnaise,
or, if he could bring himself to use the blackish stuff, ketchup
for jam... Red and green peppers were also indistinguishable, because
both appeared black...."
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It is hard
for us to fathom how radically our lives would change without color. The great
Hebrew writer N.H. Bialik, reminds us, however, that beyond our physiological
ability to capture the different hues via the cones of our eyes, we have the
power to add color to the canvas of our lives - in the way we observe the world
around us and in the way we live out our days. "Then many colors [hues], new
colors, shall you adjoin to the light in your life."
COLOR Table of Contents
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