How about I try typing in the dark with the screen on the laptop turned completely off. Try to get it as close to the actual act of thinking as I can. See how it works.
I found myself thinking today that death follows you around more on a farm then when you live in other places, or at least it seems that way. Maybe not if you live in one of the world’s war zones, or say an AIDS ravished country, or any place for that matter that has something of value that the president of the United States wants, but other then that, I mean.
There’s always something dying around here, or about to die, or needing to die, looking for that little push over the edge. Mice in the yard. Moles. Birds. Lots of birds, especially in the spring, literally pushed over the edge of the nest, I guess. Featherless and almost always wet for some reason. Are they all plucked from their nest by some ruthless bluejay? And is that why they’re wet? Are birds mouths (beaks, I guess) even wet? Or does that have something to do with the dogs, who like to carry the lifeless things around like prizes?
It seems like it would do everyone a little good to sit down and make a list of the things they wouldn’t mind killing, if the need arose. Sounds harsh, I know, but bear with me. Bugs would surely top everyone’s list, I guess, or maybe it’d be the microscopic creatures, like the amebas and such. I don’t know. Ants and spiders, pincher bugs and all sorts of little creepy crawlies. How about those little dog-pecker gnats that buzz around your face when you’re sweaty? Who needs those? Top of the list for me, that’s for sure.
I suppose most of us, trying to create such a list, would go with the traditional food/thinking chain idea, where mankind is on top and all the rest, well, you know the routine.
Without thinking too much about it, the meat eaters already have a big hand in a whole lot of killing. Cows, pigs, chickens by the millions. Maybe it’s billions, I don’t know. But how many of us would rank these animals right up there at the top of our lists if we had to do our own killing?
What about the rodents? The mice and rats of the world? The opossums and raccoons and whatnot, creeping around outside, shitting and scratching up the place, doing what they do to try and survive as we humans encroach more and more every day. What about them? And those are just a few of the obvious mammalian examples that most people might possibly have a chance of encountering on a normal day around just about any place, no matter where you live. And for the time being, I’ll leave out the mention of cats and dogs, so as to not alarm the pet-loving masses. Oh how we love our cats and dogs. According to one report I found (later, of course, I didn’t pull this typing straight out of my head), pet food sales in the U.S. alone topped 13 billion in 2003. 13 billion. It’s hard to believe. (I almost said, hard to swallow). So no, we won’t be killing off our dogs and cats any time soon, unless of course we end up over-feeding and pampering them to death, which of course, the pet food industry will make sure is exactly what we won’t do. And here we were, thinking that the old saying, “Don’t bite the hand that feeds” had something to do with animal behavior. We don’t actually know what it’s about, do we? I don’t think we have any idea who is feeding who.
Here’s a side thought: I wonder how much we spend feeding a similar number of children in the U.S. I wonder how attention would factor into the equation. How about a study comparing the amount of quality time spent with the average child compared to the time spent with the family pet. If only our children were hairier and couldn’t talk. Don’t worry, we’re getting there.
Today I found myself working out in the barn, trying to paint one of the landscape trailers, when the dogs start going crazy, tearing into a pile of peat pots stacked in the corner. The dogs are knocking these things all over the place, making a big mess, but at least they’re staying away from the wet paint, so I let them tear. Better then dropping what I’m doing and running out and buying them a billion dollars worth of treats. Probably just a mouse, or maybe a rat, I think. Good exercise for everyone involved. Survival of the fittest, and all that. Besides, they’ll never catch it, not with that many pots stacked in the corner. Hundreds, maybe a thousand. A million possible places for a mouse to hide. And dogs, well, you know, dogs just aren’t the smartest creatures and are easily evaded by almost every other creature on the planet. Man’s best friend. Kind of a funny choice, if you ask me.
But suddenly the action cranks up a notch or two, and what do you know, the dogs end up pulling an opossum (or is that “a opossum") from the pile of pots and commence to shaking and biting. By the time I get over there, the opossum is bleeding and in pretty bad shape.
Okay everyone, time to reach into those pockets and get out our lists.
“Sit,” I tell the dog, which he does for the first time ever (it seems like), “so I can check my list.” So let’s pretend for a moment that we reach into our pocket and pull out a complete, fully organized list of all creatures great and small, arranged in order of importance to remain alive. Seems impossible, but what a valuable tool to have at that moment, surrounded like you are by half-crazed dogs, a half-crazed nine year old boy, a bleeding opossum, a trailer, only halfway painted, and daylight that is quickly running out on you.
Without the list we are lost. We begin to argue inside our own head.
Now I suppose I should have a little sympathy for this creature.
But he’s crapping on the same pots that my employees will have to use. Stinking up the place.
Yes, but he’s only trying to hide.
I know, but…
The argument could go on for days, couldn’t it? We need the list. We need simplification. Our lives beg for simplification. Because really, the opossum is just one simple example, and even with this one, we have a hard time. Where does the opossum fit in? Where do we all fit in? Do we scold the dogs? Nurse the opossum back to health at any and all costs? Pick up whatever is handy, like a crowbar, for instance, and bop the animal out of his misery? What do we do when faced yet again with the nagging question of life vs. death?
Emotion is probably one of the biggest players in the game of life and death, don’t you think? Economics plays another lead role. Growing up, when it came to animals, I remember the talk always coming back around to costs. Throughout so much of history, it’s never been easy, being a sick or injured animal, especially on a farm. Not when the nights are so long and cold, the predators so hungry and anxious, and the .22 shells so cheap and abundant. No, it’s best to stay healthy, especially if you’re high on the list, or low, depending on how you look at it, or where you fit in.
They say that serial killers have little or no emotion whatsoever when it comes to killing. How can this be? That there is no scale to measure things against, for them. No list is necessary. As true killers of humans, they have somehow over-simplified this question.
Surely there is something in between. Some place acceptable to exist. Some space inside of us, as well as outside of us, where life and death finds some sort of balance.
***
I think I will type more in the dark. It’s not so bad.