BY DR. LESTER EDWIN RUIZ
I think we are not supposed to die alone.
Sometime between 1:00 AM and 5:00 AM this morning, our little budgie, the one with a broken leg, the one the others were picking on, the one we tried to save by separating her from the healthy ones, our little budgie died.
We would take her to the bird doctor tomorrow—even made an appointment last night—but it was too late.
I had a feeling she was not going to last the night. So I asked her, before I went to bed, to hold on just until we could get her to the doctor, but I also said not to hang on just on our account.
And she left. Perhaps, the injury was too much to bear. They say that birds have a way of keeping the appearance of being well, and so when they look unwell, that means they really are unwell and past “saving.”
And last night, she looked unwell. Call it an instinct for self-preservation—this hiding one’s “injury;” this keeping suffering from others. And it makes sense—the law of the jungle is “the fittest live”—so one must not show injury. One must keep suffering to one’s self.
From my perspective, human as it is, keeping one’s suffering from others is a marker of thoughtfulness—an expression of consideration for the other. But, I won’t turn it into a normative expectation.
The human community should be free and open enough to share joy and sorrow, blessing and curse: community and loneliness.
No one should be forced to die alone. No one must live in loneliness.
I chose to intervene when I saw our other budgies “bullying” the injured one. I thought my separating her from the others was a way of protecting her. Maybe that was right, maybe that was wrong.
I am not a bird expert. But, one thing I noticed, even though I kept her in a cage close to the others, separated only by the bars of the cage—so they could still hear each other, see each other. I noticed the others kept “looking” for her, kept in proximity of her.
And, I noticed, too, that our injured one was trying to “re-join” the others last night. And when I opened her cage to feed her and make things comfortable for her, she did not move away from my hand. She even allowed herself to be touched.
Maybe she was just too injured to move away. But then again, maybe, as a social species (budgies are supposed to be that), that is their “instinct”: to be with others even to the very last.
And maybe, the “bullying” behavior was not intended to harm but was an expression of “community” between them, even an attempt to care for the injured one.
And if so, I made a huge, terrible mistake. I took her away from her companions—and I probably should not have done that. It seems that her last acts of life were to rejoin her group.
And interestingly, when I came down this morning, instead of being greeted by the noisy cackling and chirping of our budgies, there was silence. I think the others knew one of them was gone.
No one should die alone—or be forced to die alone. No one. Not even our injured budgie.
I will never know whether I did the right thing or not. But that is neither here nor there.
The fact is, our injured budgie left us last night. And she did so quietly in the night, without making too many demands on her companions or us.
And this is her gift to our frail, oftentimes arrogant and self-centered human sensibilities.
We need to learn—I need to learn—to live in ways like our little, injured budgie.
Posted on FB – 6:00 AM, May 30, 2014.
About Dr. Lester Edwin J. Ruiz
Lester was a faculty member of the New York Theological Seminary in New York City beginning in 1997, where he was a professor of theology and culture.
He became vice president for academic affairs and academic dean in 2006. As an associate professor of political science at International Christian University, Tokyo, Japan, he taught peace and world order studies, international relations, and politics and culture.
A graduate in pastoral care and counseling from Ottawa University (Kansas), he holds the Master of Divinity with an emphasis on religion and society and a Ph.D. in social ethics from Princeton Theological Seminary. He is ordained in the Convention of Philippine Baptist Churches.
Ruiz is co-editor of four published works, including Re-Framing the International: Law, Culture, Politics, with Richard Falk and R.B.J. Walker. He has contributed numerous chapters to books and has been widely published in journals and other periodicals.
Active in social media, like Facebook, Lester shares his ideas and reflections on various topics. We have taken the opportunity and permission to share his thoughts on the death of his pet he blogged on Facebook. Thank you, Lester.
– From Worry To Glory
PHOTO CREDIT: Joven Baloyo
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