Every few steps was a battle. He had chairs spaced out along the short path to the creek—islands of safety where he could sit and wait for his breath to come back, a process that took longer every day.
"It’s just 'miner’s asthma,' El," his father used to say between ragged coughs. "The price of a steady paycheck." black lung disease
The air in the Hollow didn’t just sit; it pressed. For Elias, it had been pressing for thirty years, ever since he first followed his father down into the belly of the Appalachian ridge. Back then, the dust was just part of the uniform—a fine, silver-black powder that coated his eyelashes like "Maybelline" and turned his sweat into ink. Every few steps was a battle
But now, standing in his own backyard in West Virginia, Elias knew the price was much higher. He looked at his grandson, Caden, who was splashing in the creek a few yards away. Elias wanted to join him, to show him how to catch crawdads, but his world had shrunk to the length of a clear plastic tube. He adjusted the oxygen tank in his daypack, the weight of it a constant reminder of the "clamp around his chest". "The price of a steady paycheck
The Air Down There: A Miner's Story on Developing Black Lung