I am Responsible for the Squashed Squirrel
I just saw a squirrel get hit by a car right in front of mine.
One moment, there were two squirrels playing - maybe courting, maybe fighting - on the sidewalk, bounding around each other, coming together, bouncing apart, skittering in a circle only to fly at one another again. Suddenly, in its dance, one leapt right off the sidewalk and met the tire - possibly even just the barest edge of the tire - of an oncoming SUV.
Twitching. Fabulous tail fanning.
I adjusted the steering wheel of my car two inches to the left, sliding by without a sound, without ceremony.
That just happened. Poor squirrel.
A peek in the rearview mirror. Still down. Get up, squirrel. Be okay.
Squirrels. Because who did the other squirrel lose? A playmate or childhood friend? A lover? An enemy? A brother.
I have lost a brother.
And then the shock. In the midst of watching nature happen, before I was even fully able to wonder about it, I was confronted with its death. I wasn't just witness to the death of the squirrel and some kind of natural relationship, though I'm sure that was also the outcome, but the death of nature itself.
And I am just grieved.
What are we doing here?
One moment, there were two squirrels playing - maybe courting, maybe fighting - on the sidewalk, bounding around each other, coming together, bouncing apart, skittering in a circle only to fly at one another again. Suddenly, in its dance, one leapt right off the sidewalk and met the tire - possibly even just the barest edge of the tire - of an oncoming SUV.
Twitching. Fabulous tail fanning.
I adjusted the steering wheel of my car two inches to the left, sliding by without a sound, without ceremony.
That just happened. Poor squirrel.
A peek in the rearview mirror. Still down. Get up, squirrel. Be okay.
Squirrels. Because who did the other squirrel lose? A playmate or childhood friend? A lover? An enemy? A brother.
I have lost a brother.
And then the shock. In the midst of watching nature happen, before I was even fully able to wonder about it, I was confronted with its death. I wasn't just witness to the death of the squirrel and some kind of natural relationship, though I'm sure that was also the outcome, but the death of nature itself.
And I am just grieved.
What are we doing here?