All My Noisy
Neighbors
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First things
first. Our Baby Marley is home. She is home, ready for the hard work of getting
healthy and growing and looking at everything around her with those big eyes.
We are so grateful. And we are so grateful for all the friends and strangers
who cared, who in small ways took our baby in their arms and into their hearts
and helped her heal. Thank you.
That dog of
mine has put me into the habit of greeting the rising sun on our first walk of
the day. Believe me, before Lola came to live with me, I did not leave the
house at first light.
I’ve no
problem anthropomorphizing non-humans around me. This morning, in my
meditations, the birds, in all their great variety, inhabiting the
wide-spreading trees, took on characteristics of people living in high-rise
condominiums, maybe without quite as much fuss as we humans.
Kiskadees
prefer the upper floors, the penthouse suites, noses high in the air, a bit
above the rest of us, more colorful, louder in their opinions. Let me tell you,
those Kiskadees, they are loud! And insistent that you hear their opinions.
Over and over and over. They would be great radio personalities, you know the
kind, ones who host phone-in talk shows.
Tanagers and
Palomas seem to furnish the middle units quite happily. These characters are
softer voiced, more musical, more space between their words.
Rainbirds
like to hang out, separate but connected. They are private types, tend to
listen before they sound off. (I’m making this up, of course, you know that.)
Partridge
doves and warblers nest in every limb of the lower units. These inhabitants of
the numerous condos, apartments and high-rises around us, provide the
background music of life, always there, always singing.
Of course,
this is my own silliness, a silliness that sprang from thinking about how much
the birds need the trees and the trees need the birds. That’s what I think, at
any rate. And we, or I, need the trees and the birds.
When I leave
the house in the morning I walk beneath a ring of trees, full of birds singing
the sun up. If the birds go silent, I look around to see what and why. They pay
no attention to me. This morning I saw a hawk, a rare sight.
Vultures are
always circling the air currents. Vultures don’t live in our ring of trees but
they have habitations in a particular group of trees in town. The birds give no
mind to the vultures, knowing they are looking for riper prey. Once my birds
deemed the hawk of no danger to them, they resumed song.
But is it
song? Maybe they are arguing. My nest is better than your nest. What about that
slovenly bird-brain on branch 23? Birds of that feather shouldn’t be allowed to
live among we-are-better-than-thems. Deport that bunch back to Missouri. Take
away their visas. Those lower-caste birds on the bottom tiers, can’t we boot
them to the slums? They are surely nothing but troublemakers.
In my world,
silly or not, I’ll call bird voices song. Or prayer. Or blessing.
This morning
I noticed a flock of yellow Tanagers. I love the Tanagers. (The Western Tanager
is red-orange, a glory of feather-dress, and likes to hang out in the
Bottlebrush.) These yellow Tanagers, or they might be Orioles, were riding the
air to the height of the tallest pines. We have a type of pine tree that tends
to loom above the spreading-branches trees.
The tanagers
this morning perched on outside branches of the pine tree above Julie’s house,
arranged themselves as if they were Christmas decorations. The sight so
delightful, I had to stop in my tracks with admiration for so long that Lola,
who’d pranced ahead of me, came back to see why I had not followed her back to
our house.
I’ve come to
believe, personal experience, youth is wasted on the young. When I grew up on
my Dad’s farm on the Milk River, my get-away place was a cottonwood tree, trunk
and branches leaning over the water. I’d climb that tree to sing, to cry, to
celebrate, to sulk, to dream, to tell God of my understanding back then, what I
wanted and how I thought my life should go. Amen.
I remember
the texture of the cottonwood bark beneath my fingers, the solid branches
holding me in the air, the mottled shadows of sunlight through the leaves, the
tortured twigs of winter. But, I don’t remember the birds. I know there were
birds. There had to be birds.
Where were
the birds?
Where was I?
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
February,
still winter
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