Vitiligo*
Mighty sol’s ubiquitous in regions that are tropical,
but when it comes to sunlight, I have news that is more topical.
I’m evidence empirical that all folks aren’t created
to lie out in the sun’s rays until their lust is sated
for skin transposed to honey brown from a whitish hue.
For folks like me, such practices simply will not do.
Unlike my lucky college chums, my best friends and my sister,
when I’m exposed to sunlight, I am more prone to blister.
I see them put their swimsuits on and take turns rubbing oil on,
anxious to go greet the sun to get their bake and boil on,
but once they’re spread out on their towels with all adjustments made,
I’ll be covered up instead, sitting in the shade.
*Vitiligo is a chronic autoimmune disorder that causes patches of skin to lose pigment or color. This happens when melanocytes – skin cells that make pigment – are attacked and destroyed, causing the skin to turn a milky-white color. People with vitiligo have no natural protection from the sun.
The prompt for Esther’s Writing Prompts this week is “Shade.”
This is a powerful and poignant piece. It skillfully uses personal, relatable imagery—the college chums, the sister, the ritual of sunbathing—to illustrate the profound and isolating reality of a chronic condition.
The comment from the medical perspective clarifies that the speaker’s need to avoid the sun isn’t a preference but a medical necessity. The “evidence empirical” is the autoimmune destruction of melanocytes, leaving the skin with “no natural protection.” The poem transforms the clinical definition of vitiligo into a lived experience of difference and self-protection.
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Judy,
I understand now. And you live in sunny Mexico.
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Luckily, they have shade here and when not slathered in sunscreen, I stay in it.
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Very well-expressed. It can’t be easy for you to manage 💕
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Super sunscreen and staying out of the sun as much as possible…
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Good piece Judy.
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