This week I’m trying to keep my iPhone inside a little blue bag for most of the day.
I know I could use the phone’s own settings and features to limit my use, but I like the old-school approach. The bag is a small, real-world obstacle between me and … whatever. Texting a friend, looking up something on Wikipedia, checking email.
I reach for the phone, I remember it’s in the bag, I think, Do I really need to send this text?
Sometimes the answer is yes. That’s cool. I open the bag, send the text.
Other times the phone’s in the bag, all comfy, and then it rings.
The call could be from someone important to me, so I open the bag, answer the call. Eventually, though, I’ll take my training to the next level and turn off the ringer too.
The reality is, if a loved one somewhere is having an emergency, like an actual emergency, they ought to call 911.
There’s actually a lot of places they can call. I kind of like imagining all the different places one might have to call in an emergency.
In a recent New York Times article, Pepe Mujica, 89, who is the former president of Uruguay, said this about phones: “Four years ago I threw mine away. It made me crazy. All day talking nonsense.”
That made sense to me. Maybe not throwing it away, at least not yet. But the amount of nonsense going back and forth over phones? Especially from my end? Yeah, that tracks.
By way of contrast, Mujica talked about the pleasure he gets from being in nature. “When I’m in the field working with the tractor, sometimes I stop to see how a little bird constructs its nest. He was born with the program. He’s already an architect. Nobody taught him. Do you know the hornero bird? They are perfect bricklayers.”
That too resonated for me. I get the same feeling watching a spider spin a web. If you have the time to watch it, the weaving of a web is mind-blowing in its own quiet way.
Mujica said of technology: “It’s not the phone’s fault. We’re the ones who are not ready. We make a disastrous use of it.”
He said that in his view humans “have advanced more in technology than in values.”
The whole article is worth reading, though it’s behind a paywall of course.
Here are two books I’m excited to finish reading during my hours without a phone.
In the old days, especially when I was a child, I would have finished these books already. Back then I had the patience to sit quietly in the same spot for a couple hours just reading. I’ve pretty much lost that. I still read books, but fewer of them and in much smaller chunks.
Which is fine. Books are not an end in themselves. But whether it’s reading a book or watching a spider weave its web or writing a blog post like this one, I want to slow back down to something at least approaching my pre-smartphone levels of patience and attention. I’ve become so easily distracted!
It’s true that I also get joy from my phone. It keeps me connected to people I love. It makes me laugh. It makes music-sharing easy. I get to take pictures of insects or flowers or cityscapes which strike me as interesting or beautiful. Sometimes my dog absolutely needs to be photographed.
But overall I just have the feeling that my phone is sort of running my life now. And that I’ve lost something important which I had before phones came along.
I’ve lived with a number of dogs across the years. Until recently I’d never lived with one who consistently made me feel like I was being outsmarted.
Or like I was somehow falling short.
I don’t know, maybe Mocha only has the appearance of intelligence.
People say she has human-looking eyes. To me they look like dog eyes, just unusually beautiful, honey-colored ones. They flit back and forth between me and my wife as if Mocha is following every word of our conversation. Maybe she’s simply watching for any abrupt changes in mood or tone. Or for me to stop talking and put on my jacket. That means Mocha and I are going for a walk.
What I take for intelligence could also be hypervigilance. She is a rescue dog after all. One never knows what the previous home was like, what the daily patterns were, whether there was trauma. Rescue dogs don’t come with a user manual.
This is the second time my wife and I have taken in someone else’s dog.
I shouldn’t say ‘rescue.’ It conjures a bunch of negative stories in people’s minds, and it presumes information which I don’t have. What do I know, really, about Mocha’s internal experience of her prior home?
Maybe the previous owners will read this essay one day and think, Rescued? What in the world is this jackass talking about?
Private, word-of-mouth adoption is a better description in any case. The previous owners believed they could no longer provide what Mocha needed, so my wife and I took over.
‘Owners.’ Another word that doesn’t quite work. We live with dogs, we co-exist with them. We don’t own them.
Yes, you can get sued as a dog ‘owner.’ Yes, you are allowed to make medical decisions for your dog. You pay for her food, give her a home, clean up after her. Depending on where you live, you may pay an annual fee for an animal permit. So yes, there are real-world ways in which people may feel entitled to say they ‘own’ a dog.
Saying I “own” Mocha seems absurd to me, especially given the power imbalance between us. It would almost be like seeing a Red-tailed hawk high above your backyard and shouting, ‘Hey! I own that!’
No, you don’t, you nincompoop. You’re in proximity to the thing, you’re witnessing it. You may have feelings about it or even a kind of relationship with it, for a moment. But we don’t own anything. We’re here on Earth for a hot minute. And then we take nothing with us when we leave, at least nothing material.
Who knows whether you will live another year, another day?
We humans really do fool ourselves into thinking we’ll live forever. With each person we talk to, we should probably try to remember, This could be the last time I ever talk to this person!
Which might be good news, depending on who you’re talking to. But still.
Hell, Mocha might outlive me.
I don’t know why the previous family named her Mocha. I should have asked. The color of her coat is wheat or oatmeal, not mocha. Maybe mocha refers to the eye color.
A friend suggested I could switch the name to moksha, the Sanskrit term for liberation. Which I thought was a clever and intriguing idea, but Mocha is already a labradoodle and I’m already a 55-year-old white guy, and then on top of that, to slap a Buddhist or Hindu name on her? I don’t know. I just pictured myself explaining the name to people. I saw myself from their point of view — I was annoying.
At the beginning of this essay I used the disfavored word ‘rescue.’ Because I can’t quite dismiss the idea of the previous owners one day reading this, let me be clear — Mocha is a calm, loving, lovable dog.
The prior family loved her very much, but things were out of balance when I first met them. Both parents were working long hours, and in their absence Mocha was barking a lot. A neighbor was filing noise complaints with the city. Citations were being issued.
The family considered going to Arizona to get surgery on Mocha’s vocal cords.
In my view, a surgery like that ought to be against the law. It pains me to think it was considered for Mocha. Whenever an ambulance or fire truck races past Mocha and me on our walks, she howls the most remarkable, mournful, otherworldly howl. It’s like she’s trying to harmonize with the sirens. Or sync up with a pack. Or mourn the accident victim waiting for the ambulance.
I had never heard a dog howl like that. Didn’t know they could. Kind of freaked me out the first time she did it.
Maybe elective vocal-cord surgery on a dog is illegal here in California. Maybe that’s why the family would’ve had to go to Arizona. Honestly you’d think I could’ve looked that up and told you one way or the other.
My last dog, Boomer, was my best friend, extremely warm, amenable, trusting. He was not a rocket scientist, nor much of a guard dog.
Mocha is not amenable. Things need to be a certain way. One of her favorite activities is looking you in the eyes while you pet her and while you list all the specific things you like about her.
You’re such a good guard dog!
You’re so brave and loyal!
You are stunningly beautiful.
You have gorgeous eyes. Everyone says so.
You’re strong!
You waited so patiently!
That last one is more of a forward-looking, aspirational compliment.
Not that Mocha barks or paws at you when she’s impatient. Instead she just gives a theatrical drawn-out sigh, then lies back down to wait — under protest — for the next walk, meal, cuddle, or comprehensive re-telling of all her best features.
Once in a while, after we’ve finished her second walk of the day — which can last an hour or more — and once I’ve fed her, then I sit down to read a book or look at my phone or, God forbid, eat a meal of my own.
Who pops up right beside me in the most alert, expectant, regal posture imaginable?
Homegirl!
I calmly tell her, Beat it, kid. It’s Kit Time, not Mocha Time.
I don’t think she understands the distinction.
Sometimes I wake up in the middle of the night, and her face is about an inch from mine. No noise. Just staring. Wants to be let outside to pee. Or to get a drink. (She won’t drink water indoors.)
Waking up to two super alert, unblinking, non-human eyes staring at you from an inch away … it took some getting used to.
My wife is amused by how attached the dog is to me. She’ll say, ‘Admit it. You like being worshipped.’
I don’t!
Plus, I’m not sure it’s worship. Sometimes feels more like servitude, and I’m on the wrong end of it.
I almost called our couples therapist. She’s a genius, and a dog person in the bargain. I was thinking of calling and asking for help with the dog this time, not the wife.
But this therapist has already taught me so much about how to relate better to my wife and kids. I kind of know what she’d say about Mocha.
She’d say I need to: set firm boundaries; identify and clearly communicate my own needs. I need to tolerate the dog’s neediness or momentary discomfort without feeling the need to spring into action or pet her. But also she’d remind me that any relationship involves compromise. Sometimes I should go ahead and do something which may be inconvenient or tiresome for me, because I love this dog and want to make her happy. I value our relationship.
True, all of it. But Mocha is so smart! Even these strategies might not move the needle.
Coercion does not work with Mocha, like at all. You gotta be patient and firm, but mostly just patient. Sometimes during a walk I’ll give a sharp tug on the leash if she’s about to step on glass or investigate some human poop on a Koreatown sidewalk. But that’s about the extent of my coercion.
Maybe coercion actually would work. I just don’t want to be that guy. I hate seeing people yank at their dogs.
By contrast, I see some dog walkers who are simultaneously firm, composed, loving, alert to every move of the dog … it’s like watching a symphony conductor. I always think, I am notthat. But I’d like to be!
I guess the closest I’ve come to outright coercion is when Mocha really would not keep walking, nor even agree to any of the four proposed directions for continuing the walk, and I absolutely had to get home.
I told her, Don’t MAKE me humiliate you by picking your ass up and carrying you home! And then I proceeded to do exactly that.
But really who was humiliating whom? She weighs 70 pounds. And I’m not in peak physical condition. There I was walking past car after car in standstill rush-hour traffic hauling a big old, stubborn labradoodle.
Mocha didn’t seem remotely humiliated.
Faintly amused, was more like it. And pleased to add ‘Being Carried’ to her menu of ‘Things I Can Get Kit to Do for Me.’
Maybe I should get a custom bumpersticker — the one with a big paw print, but instead of WHO RESCUED WHO, it’ll say WHO HUMILIATED WHO.
Here are a few of my 10,000 nicknames for Mocha:
Mouse
Mousekin
Monkey
Moke-a-loke
Mochachina
Skump
Squiggins
Squigman
Babygirl
I don’t think she likes any of these nicknames. But she does like that I’m talking to her.
Mocha can be stubborn as hell and pouty. She likes being the center of attention. She also likes being in charge. If we go for a walk and there is a homeless encampment within a half-mile, she makes a beeline for that. She always wants to see what’s on offer, food scraps wise. Her nose is constantly working, making sense of the world.
If you leave Mocha alone in the house even for even 15 minutes, you are then greeted upon your return with the most absurd, over-the-top rejoicing. She lays it on pretty thick with all the jumping up and down and spinning around and crashing into you.
Usually when my wife and I go upstairs for bedtime, Mocha is close on our heels. But occasionally she stays downstairs, asleep, and only rejoins us later. When she does, she comes running into our bedroom, breathless, like an actress who missed her cue.
A couple months ago my wife and I went away for a week. It was the first time Mocha was home without us. I worried, of course, but gradually I was able to set aside my worries and guilt and enjoy the vacation. Then one night I dreamed Mocha was right beside me and staring me in the face. Waiting to be let outside.
I was so groggy, I started to get out of bed. Then I realized it was a dream. I wasn’t home, I was in a hotel 3,000 miles away.
The next day I heard from the housesitter that Mocha had pooped inside the house overnight. Which had never happened before.
“She felt embarrassed about it, but I told her accidents happen and it’s okay,” said this impossibly awesome housesitter (who will probably never sit for us again).
I couldn’t believe it. That’s how connected I am to this dog. I literally felt her staring at me in distress in the middle of the night from across the country.
It blew my puny little human mind.
I believe I actually dreamed about Mocha a few years before I met her. In the dream it was an extreme close-up of just one eye, and I thought it was a hawk’s eye. But when I met Mocha last year, I recognized the eye as the one from my dream.
I said earlier that her eyes were honey colored. It depends on the light. Sometimes they’re a deep amber around the edge and then a pale greenish yellow as you get closer to the black center. They have the silky luster of the gemstone Tiger’s eye. Today when Mocha was sitting in the sun trying to decide whether she wanted to walk or just be pet, her eyes reminded me of those weird mineral pools at Yellowstone National Park. Pale-but-vibrant greens and blues and yellow. So odd and unexpected against the drab landscape, and mesmerizing.
Two songs remind me of a spring evening back in the late 1980s.
The songs are “When Will I See You” and “Every Mother’s Son,” both by the Pretenders.
But how can that be?
Neither song had been released.
And yet I associate the songs with sitting in my college library trying to read a bunch of novels I had put off reading till the end of the semester.
With the casement window open as far as it would go, which wasn’t very far, sounds and smells floated up from the courtyard below. People who hadn’t procrastinated reading Fitzgerald, Bellow, and Updike were shouting to one another, heading to dinner, laughing.
Occasionally someone played a stereo loud enough from a distant dorm that I could make out the song.
The weather in Massachusetts was crappy for so much of the school year. When suddenly the evenings were mild and fragrant, you really noticed it. The combined effect of the new weather, the twilight hour, and the music I was listening to on my headphones gave me an unsettled and lonely sort of feeling. A mood of longing.
I get this same feeling from the Bruce Springsteen song “One Step Up” and from the weary, coked-out desolation of “Moonlight Mile” by the Rolling Stones. And from Little Feat’s “Willin’,” “Roll Um Easy,” and “Long Distance Love.”
Until college I had known Chrissie Hynde’s voice only from up-tempo radio hits like “Brass in Pocket” and “Back on the Chain Gang.” I hadn’t heard the slower, meandering stuff.
What song was I listening to in the library?
Was it “Kid” from the Pretenders debut album eight years earlier? Or maybe “2000 Miles” from Learning to Crawl?
I suppose it’s possible I was simply having the same type of feeling, cooped up in the college library, which I would later re-experience while listening to newer songs on the albums “Packed!” (1990) and “Last of the Independents” (1994).
Hynde’s voice isn’t beautiful in a traditional way. But it’s beautiful to me. And it’s a voice I would never mistake for anyone else’s. The same is true for Rod Stewart, Emmylou Harris, and Dolly Parton, as far as that goes.
When I was in high school, my older sister — home from college — played for me Joni Mitchell’s “River.” It really cast a spell. It affected me the way literature at school was probably supposed to, but never really did.
My sister, six years older than I was, always had great taste in music. I benefited a lot from that. She turned me on to Karla Bonoff, Neil Young, Laura Nyro, Elton John, Bonnie Raitt, Stevie Nicks, John Prine, Paul Simon, Rickie Lee Jones, Joan Armatrading, and Suzanne Vega. I was a sappy little fuck, and my sister didn’t make fun of me for it, but instead recognized it and nurtured it. The singers she played for me would keep me company for years to come. They still do.
In college, I listened to a lot of Van Morrison, Shawn Colvin, Nanci Griffiths, R.E.M., the Smiths, and the Replacements, as well as Boston-area street performers Luke Hunsberger and Miriam, last name unknown (sorry, Miriam).
I always gravitated toward the moody, singer-songwriter stuff. In my 20s and 30s, my playlists were crowded with Lucinda Williams, Fiona Apple, Sheryl Crow, Etta James, Dionne Warwick, Everything But the Girl, Shane MacGowan, Son Volt, Wilco, Tom Waits, Dolly Parton, and Mick Jagger’s country-flavored “Don’t Tear Me Up” and “Evening Gown.”
In more recent years the voices which keep me company are Lori McKenna, Haroula Rose, Jason Isbell, Guy Clark, Mari Kalkun, Rodney Crowell, Margo Cilker, and — lately — Kacey Musgraves.
I’m late to the Musgraves party. I didn’t run across her 2018 album Golden Hour until a few weeks ago. My favorite songs are “Love Is a Wild Thing,” Space Cowboy,” “Slow Burn,” and “Butterflies.”
What feeling do the songs conjure?
For me, it’s the feeling you have when your kids grow up and move away.
Or when you find yourself thinking of a friend who died years ago.
Or when you realize that now it’s your kids who are trying to catch up on their college work, trying to figure out who they are, who they want to be.
A Spotify playlist based on the above post can be found here.
And an even better playlist, time-capsule wise, is right over here.
There will always be human activities which the passing of time reveals to have been horrible, backward, unethical, or just plain dumb.
Laboratory experiments on animals will wind up in this category, I think.
The truth is, most experiments are not only cruel and unnecessary, but also useless. Even in the best-case scenario – testing not for cosmetics, but for a promising new drug or medical procedure – the results of animal trials are by definition preliminary and are presented with a big caveat: We don’t know yet how it will affect humans.
Then human trials begin, and the whole reason for animal testing in the first place – We can’t try this on people! – is quietly put aside.
Simply put, we experiment on animals because we can. We have so-called dominion over other species.
This is not a great starting point, ethically. There are a million things we can do but which we instinctively know we shouldn’t. We could use human infants, for instance, for lab experiments. But we don’t. We know it would be wrong.
Another argument is that other species don’t matter as much as humans.
Again, not the strongest argument. Anyone who has lived with a dog, cat, horse, or any other creature knows that animals can matter quite a lot to us, to say nothing of their overall importance to a balanced, healthy ecosystem.
Anyway it’s not an either/or question. Both groups matter – humans and non-humans.
I learned recently about a series of monkey experiments in a Harvard lab. I won’t go into gory details here. If you want that info, you can click this link or this one, or this one. And if you want to listen to an intelligent account by someone who worked in a primate lab, click here. Ari Handel, a former classmate of mine, tells a story which is by turns funny, sad, wistful, and wise.
I love Harvard. It’s where I met my wife, where I formed some of my closest friendships. Several of my professors were brilliant and inspiring.
Further, I understand that Harvard is like any other university. Things will go wrong from time to time. A professor will grope a student, or will sell technology secrets to China. Students will get caught cheating. I get that.
However, those misdeeds are not endorsed and funded by the university, as animal experiments appear to be. And with Harvard already taking a hard look at its history of mistreating Native Americans and of benefitting from slavery, I wonder, Why wait a hundred years on animal experiments? Why put off dealing with a mess we could start cleaning up right now?
If there had been a class when I was at Harvard on how to unwind the school’s animal experiments, on the logistics of releasing animals to sanctuaries, on what sorts of research could proceed without cruel and unnecessary experiments, I think the class would have been more meaningful and rewarding than most of what I studied.
It’s also worth noting that students today are prone to all the same mental-health challenges affecting the rest of us — stress, anxiety, depression, procrastination, isolation, and addiction to phones and social media. Schools and businesses have begun to realize that one way to alleviate these issues is — you guessed it — animals. Some colleges make therapy-animals available. Others allow live-in pets.
Ending animal experiments at Harvard doesn’t mean banishing animals from campus. Instead, it means building a new relationship with them, one informed by basic standards of kindness, care, respect, and compassion.
Harvard already has an office which monitors lab experiments and regulatory compliance. But as long baby monkeys are still being taken from their mothers and having their eyes sewn shut, what are we really talking about? The animal-care office seems underfunded, disempowered, or oriented mostly toward liability and PR.
To me an animal lab is like a slaughterhouse. It hums along great as long as 99% of us don’t see the inner workings.
If we did, I’m guessing most of us would say hell no.
One thing I’ve noticed about gardening — not only do I lose myself in it and sort of drift away in my mind, but sometimes I wind up in an awkward position trying to reach a particular plant or branch.
Yesterday I was on my knees reaching past red-blossomed Egyptian starcluster when all of a sudden I heard an unfamiliar voice just inches from my ear.
“Why do you do it like that?”
I just about jumped out of my skin.
“Jesus!” I said.
“So sorry!”
I turned to my left. I was face-to-face with a praying mantis.
“I didn’t mean to frighten you,” the mantis said.
“No, it’s fine, I just wasn’t expecting it.”
“Sometimes I see you lined up to do something with your right hand,” said the mantis, “like that’s how your whole body is oriented. But then you reach across and do the task with your left hand.”
“I do?” I said.
“It’s none of my business, of course,” said the mantis. “I just see you twisting like that, and I wondered if there was some advantage to doing it that way.”
“In my own group,” the mantis added, “if we were oriented like you are, if we were facing that way and we needed to do something over here –“
The mantis reached out its right foreleg.
“Then we would use this.”
It extended the same foreleg, then retracted it. Twice.
“Or we would do this,” said the mantis, quickly bringing both forelegs together as if to catch a fly.
“That makes sense,” I said, admiring the delicate agility of the mantis. “But in humans, one hand becomes dominant over time. We get better at using that hand for certain tasks, like throwing a ball or writing.”
“Ah,” said the mantis.
“In my own case,” I said, “I’m right-handed.”
“You do line up that way,” said the mantis, “but then you use the left hand.”
“Maybe that’s true,” I said. “I never really noticed it.”
“It just seems so … well, I don’t want to put a label on it,” said the mantis. “It’s not something my group would do. For us orientation is everything. Well, and balance.”
“Your balance is amazing,” I said. “I saw a friend of yours yesterday. He was upside down!”
I pulled my phone out of my pocket and scrolled through recent images.
“This guy,” I said holding up the phone.
“He’s not my friend,” said the mantis.
“Oh no,” I said. “Really?”
“Not in my group,” the mantis said.
“Well, he is a mantis, though,” I said, studying the photo. “Different species, I guess.”
“If you’re more skilled with your right hand,” said the mantis, “then why use your left for the phone?”
“For the phone we use both hands,” I said.
“But you’re holding it with your left,” the mantis said. “And you showed me the picture just now using the left.”
“Honestly I don’t stop and think about each little movement like that,” I said. “And just because one hand is dominant, it doesn’t mean we use only that hand. We use both.”
Just as I said “both,” the mantis snapped his forelegs together and snared a tiny caterpillar.
“Wow,” I said. “That was quick.”
“Sorry to eat while talking,” the mantis said. “I was waiting a long time for that guy to come out from under the leaf.”
I had never watched a mantis eat. I was astounded by the mechanics of the mouth. There appeared to be five or six different moving parts. It wasn’t disgusting exactly, but profoundly alien. Parts of the mouth looked like a very tiny version of that claw mechanism on the arcade game where you try to pick up a toy or stuffed animal.
“More of a snack than an actual meal,” the mantis said, finishing up. “Did you notice how I grabbed it?”
“Both legs,” I said.
“And did you see how I was positioned? I barely had to move.”
“You were ready for him.”
“Now if it’s okay,” the mantis said, “I would like to ask a more personal question.”
“Of course,” I said.
“I’m not sure exactly how to phrase it.”
“Well, you’re not going to hurt my feelings, if that’s what you’re worried about.”
“Very generous of you,” said the mantis. “I do find myself embarrassed even to mention it, but yes, oh dear … well, your, ah, your limbs. You have four of those?”
“I do.”
“I see,” the mantis said gravely.
After a long pause the mantis said, “Is this a reality which you experience as perilous and terrifying? Or just deeply sad?”
“No, no,” I said. “None of those things.”
“Really?” said the mantis, brightening.
“Having two legs and two arms is all I’ve ever known,” I said. “That’s how we humans are designed. Now it’s true that some people have only one leg. If they were in a war, for instance, or if they got attacked by a shark. Some people don’t have any legs.”
“Oh god,” said the mantis.
“My point is, if a millipede were to ask you a similar question — ‘do you feel the lack of all these many legs which we millipedes have’ — you would probably just laugh, right?”
“I think I would!” said the delighted mantis.
“As a human, I’m only meant to have two legs and two arms,” I said.
“You get along quite nicely on the bottom ones,” the mantis said. “It’s remarkable.”
“Thank you,” I said.
“However, you may still have some thinking to do about the other thing. The twisty, reachy business. I’m not sure we got quite to the bottom of that.”
“Haha, okay,” I said, “I’ll give it some thought.”
“Confused body, confused mind,” said the mantis. “I really shouldn’t have been able to startle you like I did. You’re much larger than I am. But you were all twisted up and out of position.”
“That’s different,” I said. “I just wasn’t paying attention. If I’d been in a slower, more mindful state, then I’d have seen you right off the bat, before I knelt down. That’s a state-of-mind problem, not a posture problem.”
“Everything is a posture problem,” the mantis said. “Or as my group likes to say, if the orientation is right, you can catch the Right Before!”
“I’m not sure I follow that one,” I said.
“The ‘right before’ is the moment which already happened, just now. It’s the most immediate past,” said the mantis. “Maybe the saying doesn’t translate. It just means, if the attitude and orientation toward object are correct, you can accomplish anything. Even that which seems impossible.”
“I love that,” I said. “I’ll remember it.”
“My pleasure,” said the mantis. “I’ll let you get back to it then.”
He tilted his tiny, shovel-shaped head down toward the weeds.
As I knelt forward and went back to work, I could hear him singing out his cheerful aphorisms in the early-evening stillness behind me.
I’m headed to Montana tomorrow to meet up with my siblings and our mom. We’re going to spread the ashes of our father, Thomas A. Troyer, who died in May at age 88.
Each of us had our own relationship with Dad, and in my own case — as the fourth and final child, and a late-arriving one at that — the relationship was a little more hands-off.
Dad basically left me to my own devices and was the opposite of a helicopter parent. He was happy to help me if I asked. But he never tried to control who my friends were, what colleges I applied to, what career I chose, who I married, anything like that. He was by nature a private man, and he was happy to extend that same courtesy to others. He didn’t pry or meddle. Even as a kid I appreciated that.
My father was extremely intelligent. Supposedly he graduated second in his class at Harvard in 1955. I say ‘supposedly’ only because by the time I went there myself, spot-by-spot rankings weren’t released, only quintile placement, and I’m not sure the system was any different in his time.
That said, to the extent my dad was himself the source for this bit of family lore, then I trust it. He grew up in Omaha, Neb., in the 1930s and 40s, and absorbed the values of that time and place. Bragging was a big no-no, same with putting on airs.
I remember two times in my life when Dad chastised me. One time I deserved it, the other I didn’t. But both times he did the admonishing quietly and privately. Which, again, I appreciated.
In the first instance, he went to pick me up from soccer practice one evening. This almost never happened. He worked long hours, and my mom — or other moms — usually handled soccer carpool. I was 10 or 11 years old. My dad was supposed to pick up me and my two closest friends. When he arrived, he found just one of us at the pick-up area. And that lone boy was upset because I and the other friend had ditched him. We’d run off to some other part of the park, and it was evening, and this boy didn’t know who was picking him up or where his friends had disappeared to. He was sad and frightened. His feelings were hurt.
By the time I arrived back at the pick-up site, I realized I had violated two of my dad’s cardinal rules — don’t be late and, more importantly, be kind to others. He didn’t say anything till later when we were alone. Even then he kept it short. I’d been mean to a friend, and he was disappointed.
The other time Dad admonished me, he was in error. Again the incident involved soccer. My team had scrimmaged another team and beaten them badly. Days later my father, who had not been at the scrimmage, bumped into a fellow lawyer whose child was on the losing team. The man said our team had been poor winners and there had been trash talk.
From the way my dad relayed this allegation, he seemed to think I’d been among the offenders. I had not. But because I was quite young at the time — maybe just 8 or 9 — and because my father’s disappointment was so rare and frightening, I couldn’t find the words to protest my innocence. I just listened and nodded, miserable.
Dad said something to the effect of, We don’t do that. We’re good sports whether we win or lose.
Even though that particular talking-to felt unjust, I learned from it. It underlined the importance of sportsmanship. As a soccer player, I wasn’t big or strong or fast. But I had stamina, a strong will to compete, and — thanks partly to the misunderstanding with Dad — good sportsmanship. I always tried as hard as possible and kept my mouth shut toward opponents and referees.
All of which makes my dad sound rigid and severe. Those moments were the exception. The norm was kindness, generosity, and a dry sense of humor. He was an excellent listener, too.
He let us have dogs growing up. He took us on wonderful summer vacations in Montana, Wyoming, and Idaho. He taught us how to fly-fish and ride horses and go camping. In fall and winter he took my older brothers bird hunting. In spring he took us all to Caribbean islands. He would go snorkeling with us or deep-sea fishing. When we played doubles in tennis, he would give me a heads-up before hitting the ball my way. I was younger than the others, and he wanted to make sure I got a fair chance.
He paid fully for all our college educations. None of us had any debt when we graduated.
When my mother was pushing my brother Ken to apply to medical school, my father took a different tack. He sat down with Ken, talked about his own life choices at that age, and said Ken should do what made Ken himself happy. Don’t worry about trying to please others, Dad said.
Dad was intense, and could be quirky or even embarrassing. One time he objected loudly from the stands about a referee’s decision in a pro hockey game: “Picayune offenses like that are enforced while gross atrocities go unpunished??”
He didn’t blend in great in blue-collar settings.
He could be single-minded to the point of obsession. On a trip to Alaska one year, he and I fished for salmon on Kodiak Island. Our guide warned us and the other guests that underweight grizzly bears, fresh from hibernation and ravenously hungry, might occasionally see that we’d hooked a salmon and go ambling into the water to try to steal it off our line.
In that scenario, the guide said, we were to let our lines go slack and not try to land the fish.
Dad ignored the rule all day long. Each time there was a race between him and the bear for who would get the fish. The guide and other guests would yell out to Dad. I’d plead with him in my quiet, worried way. Dad disregarded us. He’d come a long way and paid a lot. He was going to catch every damn salmon he could.
On another occasion he was fishing at a spot in Montana which was allegedly off-limits. A man walked up to confront him. Dad didn’t look up, didn’t really even acknowledge the guy’s presence, just kept laying out long, flawless fly-casts in search of rainbow trout or German browns.
“I got half a mind to punch your lights out,” the man said finally.
“Go ahead,” Dad said, watching his fly as it floated downstream. “I’ll sue for you assault and battery.”
Eventually the man just shook his head and walked away.
And then there was the time Dad shot a guy in the face.
He was bird-hunting in Kansas with my brother Bob and a local guide. By this point in his 60s — but still utterly single-minded during a hunt — Dad shot at a bobwhite quail whose location and flight path ran right up against the outer limits of good hunter safety. That is, the guide caught a couple of tiny birdshot pellets in the cheek.
No harm, not foul, ultimately. And the trip continued. But my brother was incredulous on the final day of the trip when Dad objected to Bob tipping the guide.
Dad didn’t think the man had been particularly helpful.
To which Bob said, “Dad, you shot him. In the face.”
As the years went on, my father got a raw deal, health wise. He was diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome in his mid 50s and then Parkinson’s disease in his early 70s. His beautiful mind began to deteriorate. He’d confuse me with Bob. He’d ask me over and over where I lived, whether I did any hunting, whether I had a dog.
He wasn’t the angry, agitated type of dementia patient. He was generally mild and gentle, easily moved to tears by movies or any account of misfortune to a pet, loved one, or a caregiver’s relative.
He was also stoic as hell, his whole life. An injury or ailment had to be pretty far along before the rest of us heard about it.
Here’s a link to his obituary, which lists some of the impressive things he did in his public life. He was a pioneer in the field of U.S. tax law and charities. Organizations which he helped get off the ground include: the Natural Resources Defense Council, the Children’s Defense Fund, and the Center for Lobbying in the Public Interest.
Even more impressive to me, though, was his private life. He was loyal to my mother, devoted to us children. He was happiest at home with us or in the wilderness with us. He never drove a fancy car. He didn’t enjoy parties. He never sought attention or talked about his accomplishments. In his 40s, he was put on a short list to be Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service. I think he would have enjoyed that challenge and done an excellent job. But he removed himself from consideration due to worries about income. He had a young family, was still early in his career, and did not come from a wealthy family himself. Providing for us was his top priority.
He wasn’t a religious man. He basically thought of religion as superstition. The scripture in our house consisted of two movies, which we all knew by heart — Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, and Jeremiah Johnson. Quotes from these were the idioms we used with one another.
I figured secretly you wanted to know.
Hell, the fall will probably kill ya.
Small price to pay for beauty.
Everything’s always gotta be perfect with you.
But it was another western which my brother Ken quoted right after my father died. We were at the bedside. We were all crying. And then Ken recalled three simple lines from an epitaph in the Larry McMurtry novel Lonesome Dove.
Cheerful in all weathers Never shirked a task Splendid behavior
There’s a scene in the TV show Normal People. A college student named Connell is on the phone with his mother back home. She asks about his on-again, off-again girlfriend. He gives an answer which she doesn’t find entirely satisfying. She knows the girl has been suffering, and she’s concerned her son may have played a part.
“I don’t know what you want me to say, Conn,” she says.
“You could try, you know, being on my side,” he says.
“I don’t want to be on your side this time, Conn,” she says.
I’m quoting from memory, but that’s the gist. This exchange moved me. It reminded me of my father feeling bad for the boy whom I’d left stranded in the twilight after soccer practice.
To the extent I wound up doing anything right as a parent myself, I tend to trace it back to Dad, whose kindness was especially notable because his own father had not been particularly warm or emotionally available.
Dad was never overly invested in our professional success, nor in the daily minutiae of our lives. He believed those were fundamentally our own business. He wanted us to be happy, he was available if we needed help. And he believed every household probably ought to have a dog or two. Apart from that, he wasn’t going to second-guess or pass judgment. He didn’t see it as his place.
At the end of his life, when his thinking and speaking were so severely limited, Dad’s most frequent remark was to my mother: “I love you, Sally.”
Splendid behavior indeed.
Ken and Dad, holding the 8-lb 5-oz brown trout Dad caught in Minnesota as a young man
I followed a Monarch butterfly today as it floated along the sidewalk.
Or maybe it was a Painted Lady. I’m not sure.
When it landed in flowering lantana near Irving Street, I found a spot at what seemed like a polite distance and sat down on a rock wall.
Two cars went past. I could hear an airplane overhead. The day was extremely warm.
“I read your blog,” the butterfly said finally. “The beetles, the mites, all that.”
“And?”
“It was cute,” she said.
The way she said ‘cute,’ you could tell she didn’t think much of the blog.
Or maybe she thought I had been interviewing lesser animals.
“If you and I are going to talk,” she said, “I have some rules.”
“I love it!” I said. “I’m all about rules.”
“First you need to apologize.”
“Oh no,” I said. “For what?”
“You killed many of us in the desert,” she said. “When you lived there, you would drive your machine right through us.”
She wasn’t wrong. A long time ago I worked as a newspaper reporter in Victorville, Calif., which is in the Mojave Desert. Butterflies would migrate through the area each year, thousands of them. When you stopped for gas, you had to squeegee the bright yellow bug-splatter off your windshield.
“I’m really sorry,” I said. “I mean, obviously I wasn’t the only –“
“Thank you for the apology. I accept it,” the butterfly said. “Now let’s talk about your great-grandfather.”
“He loved butterflies!” I said. “There’s a species named after him, I think.”
“He loved us,” the butterfly said, “but he also killed us.”
And this too was true. My mother remembers being shown his butterfly collection when she was a young girl in Nebraska in the early 1940s. The collection was extensive and impeccably kept. Later it was donated to a university. But up close my mother was shocked to see what ‘collecting’ entailed. The butterflies were all dead, a pin through the center of each lovely one. The whole enterprise seemed distasteful to her, even violent.
“Do you want me to apologize for what my great-grandfather did?” I said.
“No. You bear no responsibility for that,” the butterfly said. “But we do need to acknowledge the past.”
“I get that,” I said. “I … acknowledge it?”
“There was a lot of suffering and death,” the butterfly said. “It continues today.”
A car went past on the street. In the distance we heard the beep-beep-beep of a truck backing up.
“What are the machines for?” the butterfly asked.
“Cars? They’re actually super useful,” I said. “They take us places.”
“Because you can’t walk?”
“Of course we can walk. But if you’re going someplace far, or like not even far but you’re bringing back groceries or whatever. I’m just saying — cars aren’t going away.”
“I know they aren’t going away. I merely want to understand,” the butterfly said. “And I want the two us to acknowledge the suffering they cause.”
“Done,” I said.
As soon as I said it, I regretted how quick and sort of business-like it sounded.
“What would you like to ask me?” the butterfly said.
“Wait, can I have a do-over?” I said. “The way I said that last thing … I just meant it like, an enthusiastic Yes!, you know? I didn’t mean to be dismissive.”
“What would you like to ask?”
“So many questions! For starters — “
“But if you could ask only one question,” the butterfly said, “what would that be?”
“Why only one?”
“It’s a good exercise,” she said.
“How about three?” I said. “Three seems like a reasonable compromise.”
“See whether you can boil it down,” she said. “What is the one thing you’d give anything to know about me?”
“How will I write about you if I get just one question?”
“Is that the only way you learn about someone?” she said. “Q&A?”
“No. I describe what they look like and, you know, their behavior …. Would it be okay if I moved slightly closer?”
“You may.”
I stood up and walked to the front edge of the bushes. It felt wrong to be standing above her and looking down, so I looked for a spot to kneel. I got as comfortable as I could and began to study her.
“Do you mind moving to your left?” she said.
“Of course,” I said. “Why?”
“It’s my better side,” she said.
Her two sides looked identical to me, but I was touched by the moment of vanity. You think animals are above that sort of thing.
She balanced on the branch, staying stock-still even as the branch bobbed ever so slightly under her negligible weight. She was so elegant and delicate. That she existed at all seemed improbable.
And then there was the space-alien aspect, too. Up close, insects look like intergalactic creatures — big eyes, antennae, inscrutable faces, possible hyper-intelligence.
“You may move closer,” the butterfly said.
“Are you sure? I don’t want to crowd you.”
It occurred to me how generous she was being with her time. I don’t know how long butterflies live, but if you convert it to human time, she was basically spending years on our interaction.
I had so many questions to ask — what flying felt like, whether she had migrated from Mexico, whether she had memories of the cocoon. But then a random question occurred to me, and it just popped out.
“Are you a parent?” I asked.
“Is that your one question?”
“It is,” I said.
“I am a parent,” she said proudly.
“Me too,” I said, less confidently.
“It’s pretty intense sometimes,” I added.
“Very,” said the butterfly. It sounded like she was smiling when she said it. Do you know what I mean? Sometimes you can hear that.
“I want to apologize again about the desert,” I said. “I feel ashamed about that.”
“It’s okay,” the butterfly said. “You needed to go places.”
“I guess.”
“Speaking of which,” she said, “unfortunately it’s time for me to say goodbye.”
She opened her wings and gave a soft, preparatory flutter.
“Will we see each other again?” I said.
“I’m afraid it’s unlikely,” the butterfly said.
I stood up.
“I really enjoyed talking to you,” I said.
“Take good care now,” she said.
She lifted off and began to float away. As she did, I felt that pang you get when you say goodbye for real. It’s no joke, that type of goodbye.
I saw a lovely figeater beetle yesterday in my front yard.
Do you know the ones I mean? The shiny green ones?
It bumbled here and there, then flew just high enough to clear the gate to the back yard.
I opened the gate to follow, but the beetle turned around — in mid air! — as if to confront me.
“Stalker!” it whispered.
“No, I was just– ”
“Back off!”
“I didn’t mean to chase you,” I said.
“Are you even allowed back here?” the beetle asked, eyeing the open gate behind me.
“What do you mean? I live here,” I said.
“Benlives here,” said the beetle.
“Who is Ben?” I asked.
“If you lived here,” said the beetle, “then you would know that, wouldn’t you?”
“But I’m telling you,” I said, “I do live here.”
“Then why don’t you know Ben?”
I took a deep breath.
“It feels like we’re talking past each other,” I said. “Can you tell me more about Ben? Maybe I know him by a different name? I have a son, but I know him as Jesse –“
“Is he an old-world ficus? About this tall?” The beetle flew to a spot just above eye-level.
“I mean, that’s roughly Jesse’s height…”
“Old-world ficus,” said the beetle. “I guess they’re also called fiddle leaf figs. Or banjo figs.”
“Hold on,” I said, “I think I know what you’re talking about.”
I walked to the northwest corner of the yard, where my wife and kids don’t like to go because there are too many insects. The trellis overhead is thick with ivy and creeping vines. I like the spot for the shade. And because no one else goes there. Sometimes you can find a grasshopper or praying mantis back there. At night you hear the occasional rat or opossom scrambling across the canopy.
When the kids were little, we tried to call this area Fairyland. The concept never really took.
Later we offered it as a place where the kids could practice shooting hockey pucks against a heavy wood board. Again, no dice.
The spot feels a bit like the commercial property where restaurant after restaurant fails. Like the feng shui is off or something. When our dog was still alive, he would poop in this part of the yard, so my wife rebranded it yet again. Fairyland became Shitland.
But eventually the dog died, and there was no more shit to pick up. Nowadays I use the spot as a hiding place. I go there to read or write, or to putter around re-potting plants and putting away garden tools.
“Is this Ben?” I said.
I pointed to an old, neglected ficus beside the fence. It was still in its original plastic tub. It had grown at a severe, sideways angle in search of sunlight. The leaves were dusty. Spider webs covered the top. I honestly could not recall having watered the plant even once.
I turned to the beetle, which was suddenly just inches from my face. The beetle was … I don’t know even know how to describe it. Its whole little body was vibrating at a very high frequency. Just absolutely buzzing.
“Can you feeeel it?” it said, chattering.
“Feel what?”
“Oh my god … Intennnnse …”
I decided to give the beetle a moment to experience … well, whatever it was experiencing.
I took a seat at a little Moroccan-style table my wife bought years ago. This table, like me, has been gradually exiled to the dustier, more distant parts of our yard.
The delirious beetle eventually floated back to me, alighting on a branch of bougainvillea.
“THAT!” said the exhausted insect. “Is Ben.”
“I gathered,” I said.
I wasn’t annoyed exactly, but the beetle was really making a big production.
“I can’t BELIEVE you don’t feel that,” the beetle said. “Ben’s energy is AMAZINGGG.”
“Really?”
“It’s like EVERYTHING all at once,” the beetle said. “It’s the best place you ever went to and the best feeling you ever had and all your favorite memories … It’s … ”
“Overwhelming?” I asked.
“Kind of!” the beetle said.
Then I heard the tiniest sniffle you can possibly imagine.
“Hey. What’s going on?” I said.
“I’m sad you don’t get to feel that.”
“Listen,” I said, “I’m the one who should be feeling bad. I really haven’t taken very good care of … Ben.”
Just as quickly as it had started crying, the beetle began to giggle. “No one ‘takes care of’ Ben,” it said. “Ben takes care of us.”
“Well, not me,” I said. “I mean, I’m happy he has this effect on you. But for me he just looks like a plant. And a somewhat neglected one at that –“
“Stop! Seriously — ”
The beetle was now laughing so hard it couldn’t speak. So I waited for the insect to gather itself.
“Ben’s not neglected. Or sad or happy or anything else,” the beetle said. “Ben just is. He’s like, I don’t know … a power source. He’s the star the rest of us orbit around. You couldn’t move Ben if you had ten people helping.”
“Are we looking at the same plant?” I said.
I pointed to the lonely, shabby, crooked-growing ficus.
The beetle breathed out a long, washed-out, deeply satisfied sigh.
“You’re telling me what Ben ‘looks’ like. I’m talking about what Ben feels like,” the beetle said. “Anyway, whatever you’re seeing with your eyes, it’s like one one-thousandth of what’s going on. It’s all underground, dude. That’s where the vibrations come from.”
The beetle gave me an appraising look.
“Were you telling the truth?” it said. “Do you really live here?”
“I do.”
“Then you’re very lucky,” the beetle said, a new measure of respect in its voice. “Five minutes with Ben, I feel like I don’t need to eat for a week.”
“You feel … full?”
“Spiritually, yes. Energetically full.”
At this point I said a polite goodbye to the ecstatic beetle and went on my way. The truth is, there’s only so much you can discuss with somebody who is blissed-out like that. They keep telling you that you can’t possibly understand. At a certain point you have to take them at their word.
The beetle was correct about trying to move the ficus, though. Later that afternoon I tried to push it closer to the sun. It wouldn’t budge. The roots had grown through the plastic bottom and deep into the rocky patch of unremarkable earth.
As I got ready to leave town for 10 days, I worried about the baby hummingbirds near my porch.
I had watched them each day as they began to move around and make noise and ask their mother for food.
The day before I left, I heard a new sound.
A lizard had climbed high into the bougainvillea and was jamming its snout down into the teacup-size nest. The two baby birds were squeaking and chirping and scrambling to avoid their attacker.
I reached for the lizard. He jumped to a lower branch, then scampered to a hiding place at the base of the tree.
I went back to check the nest. The hatchlings were agitated, but unharmed.
I didn’t feel good about leaving town. The lizard knew where the nest was. There was nothing to stop him from returning the next day.
So I went and tracked him down.
It was evening. The lizard was in the leaves next to the rose bushes.
“Look, that wasn’t cool,” I said. “The thing with the nest.”
“Excuse me?”
“Up there,” I said, “you trying to eat the baby hummingbirds.”
“I wanted to see the nest,” the lizard said.
“That doesn’t feel super truthful,” I said.
“It’s my truth.”
“Oh jesus. For real?” I said.
“What?”
“‘My truth’ — all that crap. I didn’t know that’s in the garden too.”
“I can see that for a fascist, it might be frightening that others might see the world differently from him,” said the lizard.
“Fascist?” I said. “Because I didn’t want you to eat the baby hummingbirds?”
“Because you’re out here trying to control everyone,” the lizard said, “deciding who’s allowed to see the nest, who isn’t.”
“You weren’t going to see it. You were going to eat the babies.”
“Why are you so obsessed with eating hummingbirds?” the lizard said. “It almost seems like you’re the one who wants to eat them.”
“I don’t eat any animals at all, let alone baby birds.”
“La-dee-da,” the lizard said.
“I’m not bragging,” I said. “I’m just stating a fact. I’m vegan.”
“Cool, so is that another rule the rest of us have to follow? No one eats any animals because you don’t eat any animals?”
“I didn’t say that.”
“Right. You just tried to grab me instead,” the lizard said. “For the sake of argument, what if I was trying to eat the birds? Then what? Is it your job to protect them?”
“It’s not a job,” I said. “I just care about them. I’ve watched them grow up.”
“They’re like three days old,” the lizard said.
“But I watched the mom build the nest. And sit on the eggs. And I saw the babies right after they hatched. I feel … invested.”
“Are you going to be their bodyguard forever?” the lizard said. “What happens when they leave the nest one day?”
“When they leave the nest,” I said, “they’re on their own.”
“Ahh, so there are borders to Fascist Land.”
“Look,” I said, “you can keep saying that word as much as you want. I reject it entirely. I was looking out for tiny brand-new baby birds. Which you were about to eat. And as long as we’re on the subject, I want to tell you that I’m leaving town tomorrow and I’ll be gone a couple weeks. My wife’s cousin will be staying here, and she too feels strongly about the baby birds. I am going to bring her up to date on all this, completely.”
“Is she grabby too?” the lizard said.
“I’m not grabby. And I’m not a fascist. You can go anywhere else in the yard, you can eat whatever you want. Just not the baby birds.”
So that was our conversation. And I didn’t feel great about it. The look on the lizard’s face was sort of neutral and smug.
When I returned home 10 days later, the first thing I did was check the nest. There was just one juvenile bird. No sign of the sibling or the mom.
The next day I got to watch the young bird learning to fly. It took short trips from one part of the yard to the other. At first I thought it was injured, but then I realized that it was just brand-new to flying.
Eventually I saw the mom join her child at the center of the yard. The fledgling was resting on the ground. The mom hovered in the air right beside the child, as if to say, “C’mon, it’s fun! Give it another try!”
I was entranced. I had never seen a bird learning to fly. But I still wondered. Where was the other one? Had it been eaten by the lizard? Or had it already left the nest and successfully launched?
I saw the lizard the next day and asked him.
“Look who’s back,” the lizard said.
“I just want to know,” I said, “did you eat the other one?”
“Oh my god with the hummingbirds,” said the lizard. “Just admit it, you want to eat one.”
“Why was there only one bird when I got back? What happened to the other one?”
“I’m going to be honest,” said the lizard. “I don’t like your tone.”
“Did you eat it?”
“You really want to know?”
“Yes!”
“Okay, so why don’t you go over to the pool filter in your big, dumb swimming pool and check that before running through the whole fascist routine again.”
I felt sick to my stomach as soon as the lizard mentioned the pool filter.
I ran to the plastic plate covering the filter basket. I yanked it open. The tiny body of the missing bird was floating in the leaves, branches, and debris which had accumulated while I was gone.
The bird had landed in the pool during one of its own early attempts at flight and then never gotten out.
I felt sad — and deeply ashamed. I had known the pool was a death-trap. That was why I spent so much time checking it for bees, ladybugs, and anything else which might fall in. But then I’d left town, and I hadn’t even thought of the pool as a threat to the birds.
“I’m sorry about your friend,” the lizard said.
He had followed me to the side of the pool. He was perched on the long yellow deck chair with the old metal railings. He watched me clean off the bird and lay it on a leaf.
“Was it really awful?” I said. “Was the mother going crazy?”
“She was trying to figure out what she could do,” the lizard said. “But listen … stuff happens.”
“It’s my fault,” I said. “I need to get a cover for the pool.”
“It’s not your fault,” the lizard said.
“I’m sorry I accused you of eating it,” I said.
“It’s okay,” the lizard said. “The truth is, that was why I went up there that day — I was going to eat them.”
“Did you try again when I left town?”
“No.”
“Why not?” I asked.
“Because by then I knew they were important to someone.”
“I’m really sad,” I said.
“I know,” said the lizard.
I sighed.
I thanked the lizard and said goodbye. I stood up and took the tiny, waterlogged corpse to a secret corner of my yard where my dog is buried. I dug a hole for the hummingbird beside a lantana bush blooming orange and yellow.
I apologized to the bird for my negligence, for not covering the pool. I told the bird I was laying it to rest beside my dog Boomer. I said it was the most special place I could think of. Then I dug the hole, said goodbye to the bird, and covered it with dirt.
I get why people bury loved ones. You want to be able to visit them and talk and sometimes apologize.
I almost made a catastrophic error yesterday with the hummingbird nest.
As far as I could tell, the mother had vanished three days earlier. She was no longer sitting on her eggs, she wasn’t feeding any new hatchlings. She was AWOL.
I got the ladder, climbed up, and peered into the tiny nest.
Sure enough there were two babies — dark brown, less than an inch long, smushed together like two miniature sausages.
At first they didn’t seem to be moving, and I assumed the worst. But the longer I watched, I realized yes, they were still moving. Just barely, but they were alive anyway.
Having been down this road before, having found a nest with two dead hatchlings, I was eager to avoid the same ending. I went inside the house and checked online to see what rescuing the babies might entail.
People do successfully rescue them, it turns out. The process isn’t particularly complicated, though somewhat delicate and time-consuming. So I made sugar water, found a dropper, and built an artificial nest of shredded paper and dead moss. I was going to place the tiny natural nest inside the larger, fake one.
I went back outside. As I approached the nest, a hummingbird zoomed across the backyard and into the blossoming bougainvillea.
Mom was back!
Maybe she had seen me approaching the nest. Or maybe it was just feeding time. But there she was again, poking her long thin beak into the nest, tending to the newborns.
I had been seconds away from intervening, which probably would have been disastrous for the hummingbirds and definitely would have broken my general rule — when in doubt, do nothing. As Gen. Allenby says in Lawrence of Arabia, “It’s usually best.”
I was still puzzled, though, by how often the mom was away from the nest. Yes, adult hummingbirds need to eat frequently, especially when they’re eating for three. But I had figured the trips for food would be bracketed by lots of time at the nest.
I went back to the computer, this time to find out how often new hummingbirds eat.
There were conflicting reports. Some writers said hatchlings need to be fed every half-hour or so. Others said a mother feeds her young “several times a day,” which eased my worries Maybe everything really was on track.
Then I saw a statistic which put the whole thing in context. Apparently the success rate for any given hummingbird to hatch, be cared for, and then one day launch is about 20%.
And that’s not just hummingbirds. Supposedly it’s true for most other songbirds, too.
Somehow this grim statistic calmed me. It was a reminder about the overall state of affairs. Most baby birds don’t make it. It’s a bummer, but it’s how the world works.
Coincidentally, I got a similar message on Monday when I bumped into a black beetle which I’d seen several times the previous week.
“Oh, hey,” I said.
“What’s up.”
After a long silence, I tried to draw the beetle out.
“The whole garden is pretty serene and chill,” I said, “but you strike me as maybe the most serene and chill of all the species here. You have a Buddha-type vibe.”
“You’re joking, right?”
“I wasn’t meaning to.”
“This place is utter mayhem every single second of every single day.”
“Really?”
“It’s basically the Roman Coliseum all day and all night. And I’m always in the ring.”
“But you don’t seem to scurry around or panic,” I said. “You move at a very deliberate pace. When you move at all.”
“Strategy.”
“You don’t want to draw attention?” I said.
“Partly. It also conserves energy and allows me to dial in. I try to be aware of every single thing around me.”
“That makes sense.”
“Situations change in an instant. Can you imagine in your Back-and-Forth World if you were suddenly –“
“Wait, what’s the Back-and-Forth World?”
“That’s you.”
“You mean humans?” I said.
“Whatever word you want to use. It just seems like that’s how you spend most of your time. You go to that corner of the yard. Then you go to the garage. Then you go back to that corner of the yard. Then back to the garage.”
“I go other places,” I said.
“Don’t get me wrong,” the beetle said, “I’m sure there’s a purpose to it.”
“Sort of,” I said.
“My point is, imagine in the Back-and-Forth World if a creature three hundred times your size could suddenly appear from the sky, land next to you, and then start randomly jerking its head around, looking this way and that, and then — if it feels like it! — eat you.”
“We’re talking about birds?” I said.
“We are.”
“I know what you mean about how they move their heads,” I said. “It’s so random and twitchy.”
“And then there are lizards,” the beetle said.
“Oof. I forgot about lizards.”
“So disgusting. It’s like your worst anxiety dream come to life,” the beetle said. “And they’re the opposite of birds. They take it all in. They’re aware of everything, patient as hell. If one’s near you, then it becomes this excruciating, endless, slow-motion waiting game. At least with a bird, it’s quick. You get eaten or you don’t.”
“I’m realizing how far off-base I was with the ‘serene’ thing.”
“No worries.”
“Is there any way I can help?” I said. “Maybe bring you some food? Put you in a different part of the yard?”
“It would be the same deal wherever you put me. Like they say, it’s a beetle’s life.”
“I haven’t heard that expression.”
“Actually there is one thing. Next time you see me, if I’m still alive, do what you did today. Stop and hang out for a second.”
“Really?”
“It helps a lot.”
“Do beetles get lonely?”
“Haha, no. When you’re here, the birds and lizards stay away.”