It was Earth Day. As far as I could tell, the universe did
not seem to care one way or the other and I was at best an insignificant part
of it all. Still, the sky had dawned a brilliant blue – the early chill quickly
warming. I walked along Rhode Island Street towards the river to participate in
an organized trash cleanup event. I supposed that on such a bright day that anything
might be possible – but only in theory. Reality is only what actually is.
Half way to the river, I saw what looked to be an animal –
maybe a cat – ahead about a half-a-block on the sidewalk. As I approached, the
animal became instead a full grown opossum. I walked carefully nearly close
enough to touch the opossum, but it paid no attention to me whatsoever. It was
stepping out an extremely slow dance in a very small circle, circling ever
inward around itself at the edge of the concrete – one dragging half step and
then a long pause and then again a half step and a pause.
Eventually, I bent down on one knee. The opossum’s mouth
gaped open near the ground – sharp teeth exposed. It looked like there was blood
on its lips. Sounds of pain and struggle came from deep within, but only just
audibly enough for me to hear.
The opossum seemed to me to be so completely alone – dying
perhaps. Its life – whatever that life had been - was about to be over forever however
beautiful the day. The opossum was apparently passing before me in some
anguish.
In those few moments the universe became just me and the
opossum – the air that we breathed into our lungs and the earth holding our
bodies up was all. I said, out loud, ‘I’m sorry.’ I wondered what I could
possibly mean by those words and then I repeated them again. I carefully
reached out my arm and touched the back of the opossum with my hand. To me, that’s
opossum’s fur felt so very unexpectedly soft.
And then I walked on.
This apparent ending was only the beginning of Earth Day,
after all.
Bags of trash were picked up. There was a boat and people
fishing in the low, yellow sunlight on the river. A white pelican flew high
overhead flying south by southeast as I later reached the bridge. Mass Street
took my walk due south to a coffee shop where I tried to make the baristas
laugh with some silliness of mine. Suddenly, I so easily felt my own life
within me.
Then I stepped back out to the sidewalk for the Earth Day
parade. A young girl scout handed me a plastic packet of daisy seeds as she
walked by.
Everywhere I looked, in sunshine and shade, I saw beautiful
people on Earth Day. A fat young woman walking in cut off jean shorts that were
riding unevenly up her heavy thighs. A thin man in a grey beard and glasses
resting on his nose riding a bicycle with gigantic tires. A mother with her breasts
freckling above the V of her dress walked by with her child.
It continued like that all day long. South Park filled with
people and awnings. Kids scrunched their eyes shut, getting their faces airbrushed
into tigers and zebras. Kids soaked themselves to the skin playing around the
Roosevelt Fountain. Grownups talked about solar and recycling. Music played
from the gazebo. Yoga in the grass.
And nearing home, a boy riding his first bicycle called out
to me from under his bright blue helmet – except for the visor, it was just
like the kind his dad wears when he rides his motor cycle. And then two
neighbor girls stopped in at my house to see roughly ten thousand tadpoles in
my garden pond.
And by evening, with the trees to the west leafing out and
sun dappling through, my wife and I ate papaya salad out on the patio.
And finally then, near midnight, I stepped outside once more
just to look around. Over the neighbor’s roof, the yellow moon, waning, shone
through a hazy sky. And still when I turned, I could see my moon shadow against
the dark grass and a budding peony bush.
2 comments:
I so loved reading this, Bert. Opossums are really low on my list of animals I like, but I appreciate your caring for a life apparently nearly over. And all the rest of it was superb.
Thank you for brightening my day!
Loved the oppossum story. Reminds me of when Bill chased the dogs away from a porcupine. Then, the porcupine stood up on the log and barked something at him like a thank you.
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