Buddhism's first precept, "Refrain from killing," isn't what I think of first. That comes later, when I set the little mouse in the grass. She got stuck on one of the gym's glue traps overnight, and my coworker Gary made the grim discovery beside a supply closet. He lifts the paper trap two-handedly, holding it level while traversing the basketball court.
"What's that?" I ask as he passes me.
"We caught a mouse. I'm looking for someone to take care of it."
I feel sadness drape me like a soiled old shirt. "Take care of
it?"
"I can't," Gary says, sounding so much like Eeyore from Winnie the
Pooh that a moment passes before I register what he's saying. "I just –
I can't."
Sighing heavily, I consider what's going to happen. No good outcomes are
possible. Whether or not Gary and I act, the mouse will die, and die awfully.
She's been on the trap long enough that her tail, her feet, her belly, and even
her little face stick firmly to the glue. An extraction attempt will probably cause
injuries worse than death. In an even more urgent sense than applies to the
rest of us in the world, she's doomed.
Glistening black beads, her little eyes, peer uncomprehendingly at this
terrific world. Inside her, I imagine, ticks a tiny terrified heartbeat,
lightning-fast. My own heart breaks. I don't want this. But what else is there?
We work in a gym, not a kitchen. There are no foodstuffs here for her and her
rodent kin to despoil, no real harm to be done by their gnawing and nesting and
other mousy business. Why must we have traps set at all? Must we humans exploit
our primacy on Earth at every single opportunity? Is coexistence so untenable?
When I was three or four years old, my parents took me on a month-long Jamaican
vacation. Our budget globetrotting skirted what most would call "roughing
it." My parents had no problem sleeping every night, side by side, in a
tent barely made for two.
One of the places where we spent a week was a coastal town whose cliff face was
ceaselessly massaged by Caribbean waves. Free-range chickens had the run of the
property where we stayed, fluffy chicks trailing them like iron filings drawn
to a magnet, and I, in turn, was drawn to them – to almost every animal I
encountered, really. But my inept fingers, when I reached down to cuddle one of
the skittering yellow puffballs, either grasped too hard, or the animal writhed
exactly the wrong way in my hands, and suddenly it lay, warm but still, in my
open palm. I ran, crying, to my father, cradling its limp body like my most
precious possession, now broken. As if Papa could undo what I'd done. As if
anything at all could.
My father held me close. He reassured me. I wasn't bad; I hadn't done this on
purpose. I had been clumsy, though. That alone fueled my sense of shame; I was
normally such a conscientious boy. When my sobs eventually diminished, Papa
walked me to the cliff. We cast the dead chick into the blue sea and I watched
it bob along on the swells while the weight of the world pressed down on my
narrow shoulders and I wished the little bird could just be okay again,
just as it had been before my hand carelessly ended its life. This first
encounter with death lingers with me somehow, like a phantom limb that tingles
weirdly before a hard rainstorm.
My throat constricts as I walk out of the gym with the pitiable creature on
this despicable trap. Lunch is finished. The yard is almost deserted. The
bracing morning air stinks of a nearby trash fire. The mouse appears petrified,
and so many things run through my head as I set the trap down on a firm patch
of level soil. I think of pets I've loved and meat I've eaten, of dead
philosophers and living dharma, of the insects I so often move from sidewalks
to safety and that chick I killed thirty-eight years ago. I open my heart to
the tiny creature whose impulses and terror I will never be able to comprehend.
Tears blur my vision. Welling with a primal sadness that I haven't felt in
years, I fold the trap in half and do the awful thing that has to be done. The
entire world fails to fall silent in its grieving.
A few tears leaked reading this. You did the right thing though. Thank You.
ReplyDeleteAch wie traurig. In meiner Kindheit waren Maeuse Charakter, lieb angezogen u. schuetzten sich vom Regen unter einer Blume sowie Aster, Margarite usw.
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