I have a
fountain in my front yard that all kinds of birds like to fly to and flap
around in, cool off, have a few sips. One bad ass hawk occasionally flies in
and perches at the top where the water is pumped up, to cool his talons. All
the other birds clear out when he comes around.
On summer
mornings before the heat sets in, I open the front door and leave it open. My small
dog Ricky likes to sit on the carpet square inside the front door and soak up
the morning sun. After he gets enough power sunbathing, he ambles back into the
house to take a nap. Eventually I’ll shut the front door.
The other
morning I was about to leave for an appointment when I heard what sounded like
one of my dog’s squeaky toys. Ricky’s a little older, and doesn’t play with his
toys much anymore. I checked and he looked up from his bed, not a toy near him.
The squeaking continued, and came from near the front door. I looked up to one
of the high windows above the door in the entry. I saw a hummingbird vainly
trying to fly away, bumping into the second floor window. His usual blurred high
RPM wing flaps had slowed to a flutter, and his occasional squeaks were his
panic button. He apparently didn’t get why he could see the trees off in the
distance, but couldn’t fly to them. In his brain, an invisible wall blocking
his flight, did not compute.
The little guy was
exhausted from bumping into the window and settled onto the sill.
I wanted to get him
out of the house quickly because I had to leave. I found a dust mop with only a
pivoting plastic slat on the end. I opened the front door to show the tiny bird
the path to freedom and poked the flopping end of the mop up to the sill. That
made him fly again, but he headed up against the second floor ceiling. He didn’t
notice the open door a few feet below him.
“Look down,
c’mon, the door’s down here!” I called up to the scared little bird, as if he
could understand English.
He fluttered
around in confusion and soon lost power. He dropped slowly until he settled on
a high flat spot, the shoulder of the chimney along the stairwell.
But even when I went
up the stairs next to the square little ledge, I still wasn’t tall enough to
see onto it. I tried more blind herding with the mop, but it didn’t work.
Then I realized I
needed to leave soon for my appointment. I wrangled a barstool under the shelf and
got on it. Its swiveling seat made it tricky to stand on. And when I managed to
straighten up on it I still wasn’t tall enough to see onto the sill. Grrrrrr!
What the hell?
I needed a
ladder. I didn’t want to leave the bird where he was. He could die there or,
somewhere else in the house, after exhausting himself trying to get outside. I
didn’t want to come home to a poor dead bird I could have saved.
So I stepped
quickly to the garage, pulled out a stepladder and set it up under the shelf.
I climbed it and
this time, I was high enough to see the shelf and the tired, scared little
hummingbird, wide-eyed, resting. He was propped up against the wall, and eyed
me with no small amount of suspicion. I moved my right hand slowly toward him and
gently put my fingers around him, gathering him in my palm. He didn’t struggle.
At this point,
he probably thought he was a goner, in the hands of Godzilla, about to be eaten.
But he was too tired to resist.
I got down off
the ladder with him cupped in my hand and walked out the front door. I extended
my arm and opened up my hand, and the hummingbird knew what to do. The little
guy saw the open sky and trees. He flapped his wings and flew up and away. No
window stopped him this time. In a flash, he was gone.
Relieved, I rushed
off to my appointment.
Later, I told the
story to friends, and one retold it to a co-worker.
“Did he notice
the metaphor?” the friend asked about me.
Hmm, yes.
Metaphor? Analogy? Life lesson? Deep thought provoker?
I hadn’t thought
about it. It just happened and was over.
When I was a kid
fishing on rocks along Lake Tahoe, I had a similar free-the-trapped-wildlife experience.
And it gave me a great feeling. To this day, it’s still one of my most spirit
lifting memories.
I caught a small
trout that I didn’t want to kill and fry up. My Dad, as was his way, listened
and understood. We kept the fish alive over night in the cold-water filled bathtub.
The next day, my Dad drove me and the fish – he was in a water filled bucket --
back to our fishing spot. I stood on the rocks at water’s edge and poured the
fish out of the bucket and into the lake. I watched the fish splash into the glassy
blue deep water and flash like lightening into his vast world of Lake Tahoe. I
can’t ever remember feeling more connected with the universe.
So I pondered,
the whole free the hummingbird episode. Like the fish story, it did have the drama of lost freedom we
all face at one time or another: freedom lost to unseen traps, fear, both real
and imagined, and the crapshoot of regaining lost freedom.
So what if the
hummingbird could squeak English to give his account of his scary adventure,
one of many that humans commonly endure in their lives?
I imagine he’d say
something like this:
Hummingbird: “Hey,
I was trapped. I was tired. I needed help. And somehow I got out.”
Me: “So did you
think it was a hopeless situation?”
H: “Pretty
much.”
Me: “Get a life
lesson out of it?”
H: “Oh yeah. Never
fly through an open doorway to a building. You might not make it out. I was
lucky, I got out. But it was only because of help.”
Me: “Anything
else?”
H: “You know those
things that block you, but you can’t see them? What are they called?”
Me: “You mean
windows?”
H: “Is that what
they’re called?”
Me: “Yes,
windows.”
H: “Well, what
is the deal with them?”
Me: “I know what
you mean. It’s a bad feeling constantly running into something you can’t see.”
H: “No, not fun at
all.”
Me: “But at
least you learned something to pass onto your friends. Don’t try to fly through
a window. Only bad things can happen.”
H: Yes, very
true. But that doesn’t help if you can’t see them. By the way, thanks for
setting me free.”
Me: “No problem,
happy to do it. By the way, your English is impeccable. Why didn’t you listen
when I told you to fly out the door?”
H: “I was
freaked out. The only thing I heard was my bird brain yelling ‘Get out! Get
out!’ or, ‘Squeak! Squeak!’”
Me: “Yes, I
heard that. Well, stay free buddy.”
H: “Will do. Hey,
gotta fly. There are some flowers I need to check out.”
So I guess there
are messages in this little caper. For us humans, it might translate roughly
to: If you find yourself banging into a wall, stop. There’s surely another a
way around it.
Oh, and if you
can free any trapped wildlife you encounter, figure out a way to set them free.
That’s a good one to remember. Even if you’re in a hurry, it will definitely make
your day.
Mark Eric Larson has written two books of essays, "The NERVE...of Some People's Kids," and "Don't Force it, Get a Bigger Hammer. To read, visit:
http://www.scribd.com/Mark%20Eric%20Larson/shelf
Mark Eric Larson has written two books of essays, "The NERVE...of Some People's Kids," and "Don't Force it, Get a Bigger Hammer. To read, visit:
http://www.scribd.com/Mark%20Eric%20Larson/shelf
No comments:
Post a Comment