The Hummingbird
I recently held a hummingbird in my hand. He had accidentally flown into a window and fallen, unconscious, on the ground in front of a busy doorway. He looked like nothing, upside down, his white belly close to the color of the concrete beneath. But something made me look closer, and when I picked him up he moved a bit.I moved him away from the human traffic, and sat on a nearby bench. Alive. Stunned, but with no visible injuries. His eyes opened, and I gave him the opportunity to fly from my open hand. He politely declined, and with an invisible gesture asked for a little more time to gather his wits. I assured him by holding my hands in a way that he was protected and secure, but could leave if he chose to that this was now the most important thing in my day, and if he needed all day he could have it.
So we sat there. Him clearing cobwebs and me just thinking, how lucky for me to have the opportunity to hold a hummingbird in my hands. How lucky for this bird that I came along.
My thoughts drifted back many, many years. Back to the house I grew up in, back to an injured bird in the gutter in front of that house, and back to my Mother. A shoebox, some paper towels, a lamp. It was exciting, I thought, to have part of the outside world sitting here in a box on the dining room table. I asked her how long before the bird would be better. She was a nurse, after all, clearly she knew how to fix a bird.
I wanted to name it.
When she told me that she wasnt confident the bird would get better (it wouldnt), I remember instantly distancing myself from the bird emotionally. I felt like I had dodged a bullet narrowly by being moments away from deciding on a name.
My Mother, of course, saw instantly what I was doing and we had what stands now as my Earliest Remembered Meaningful Conversation. She asked, as a nurse, what would happen if she stopped caring about patients who were not getting better? Patients who were going to die? They needed her more than ever during those times.
I was young, I dont recall how young. And I dont recall the words she used to express and make me understand compassion. And Lord only knows how she made it be a part of me. But that's how it is with these things. You can't identify how it is that your Mother makes you who you are, exactly. But you know that she did.
And now, every now and then but not often enough, I think about how at many other moments in my life my Mother taught me. Showed me. Shaped me. Held me, protected me, and gave me room to fly away. And I hope she knew that I noticed. That I remembered. That I will always remember.
With a big smile and a full heart, I watched my hummingbird finally gather himself, walk with his little feet to the edge of my palm, and fly away.
I am my Mothers son.
REACTIONSAscending | Descending
Friday, 16 January 2009
I really liked this piece, it's written within a beautiful consciousness
Friday, 16 January 2009
Wow, thank you so much. It's the first thing I've put up here and I had some technical struggles to get it up. But I'm glad it's here and people are reading it. Thanks for the kind words.
Friday, 16 January 2009
Yeah Ed, it's a bit of a minefield at first but one soon gets use to it, keep it coming and if ya get stuck we're all here to help! nice one, good to have ya around.
Monday, 19 January 2009
ed, that is a sweet piece of writing...........looking forward to reading some more. Like Dug says, do ask us, we are here to help.
paul
paul
Monday, 19 January 2009
Ed, Period:
Do NOT under any circumstances tell either one of these heathens anything about yourself, like where you live (Lovettsville VA) or even simple things like you're wife's name (it's Sandy, and she looks better than anything you could possibly imagine waking up on an aero-bed on my dining room floor in underpants so blue they made the sky stutter and blush.
Glad you worked through some of the junk, brother. Listen to Duggy and Paul and DAVO: you'll be fine.
I'm up to my usual, humming the theme from The Bridge Over The River Quai.
Careful though: Katie and Gail and Hagen are lurking about.
love you, bro.
G
Do NOT under any circumstances tell either one of these heathens anything about yourself, like where you live (Lovettsville VA) or even simple things like you're wife's name (it's Sandy, and she looks better than anything you could possibly imagine waking up on an aero-bed on my dining room floor in underpants so blue they made the sky stutter and blush.
Glad you worked through some of the junk, brother. Listen to Duggy and Paul and DAVO: you'll be fine.
I'm up to my usual, humming the theme from The Bridge Over The River Quai.
Careful though: Katie and Gail and Hagen are lurking about.
love you, bro.
G
Tuesday, 20 January 2009
that image is going to stay with me whilst unblocking my tubes all this morning Guy.
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I was ten years old in 1973, and my sister was 13, when our parents sat us down at our quaint dining room table in our quaint...moreTAG CLOUD
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