Lifted

November 1, 2012 in Cowbird.com, Encounters, Mary Oliver, Personal, Reptiles, Snakes, The Woods

One of my all time favorite poems by Mary Oliver (there are many contenders) is titled “May,” about an unexpected encounter the poet had with a copperhead snake.

I spend a lot of time in the the forests and fields near my home looking for animals to photograph in natural habitats, usually by rooting around beneath stones and logs and similar places. Many snakes are there.

But I live in western New York state, where we see no copperheads. Copperheads are officially listed in the field guides, but they’re far to the south of me, restricted in their range, and very rare. Same with our other venomous New York snake, the rattlesnake.

I’ve never seen either snake in the wild, nor come close. Nothing I’ve seen MAKES HUMAN-DAMAGING POISON IN ITS MOUTH. So, naturally, I’m in awe of such creatures, ignorant of them, and would be terrified of having my day ruined by being killed by one if I had to keep watch for them.

Mary Oliver’s prose poem, about stumbling upon a copperhead in her path near dusk, describes the experience of finding danger where you don’t expect it, and how theses experiences can make a person feel.

Though only the very rarest of copperhead bites results in death, they can mess you up bad. Here’s what’s likely to happen to you if you’re bitten: swelling, blurry vision, shortness of breath, incapacitation from excruciating pain, a whole lot of nausea, secondary infections, destruction of flesh near the bite, and in grisly scars. In other words, it’s a Life Event to avoid.

I’m struck by the similarities between the physiological symptoms of a copperhead bite, and the side effect risks of something else a person might experience, such as, for example, a year of chemotherapy treatments for chronic lymphoblastic leukemia.

It was during my year of chemo that I returned to Mary Oliver’s poem, and it rang a bell deep inside my experience of trying to survive cancer. The final line has come to be a defining phrase of my life. Observing the change she felt in herself after the snake held her with its gaze, and then retreated, Mary Oliver says this:

“When the thumb of fear lifts, we are so alive.”

It’s true. It happened to me.

When the cancer that held me retreated and remitted, I was overcome with what I think Max Weber would call “enchantment” – a direct experience of the world not characterized by rationality or intellect, but almost entirely emotional and infused with a kind of magic. I found myself distracted to the point of feeling mesmerized by such common and banal things as speaking to a cashier, looking at trees moving in the wind, eating bread. Some days I would walk the half mile to my part time job and be in tears by the time I arrived if I heard a crow calling in the distance.

I was worried that I was losing my mind, so I asked my oncologist about it. He told me it’s “normal” and these heightened observations and emotions would fade over time. He was right. I’ve enjoyed years of remission now, and I’m no longer crying over the feel of the sun on my head or the taste of jam.

However, in May this year, I was in South Carolina, tromping through brush and flipping logs in a scrubby area beside the hotel where I was staying, hoping to locate and photograph whatever species of frog I’d heard trilling for a mate the night before.

I was bumbling around the way I do in New York, where there’s nothing to fear in the brush, shoving my hands in holes and tearing clumsily beneath roots.

And then suddenly it was there. I felt what I’d done, before my mind could name it: I’d blundered, stupidly, dangerously, into the copperhead, looming over it and actually knocking a stick across the long muscle of its body.

I’m so grateful for its self control and its reluctance to go to war with me. The hissing was so loud, amplified by the vibration of its tail against the dead leaves, the way a rattlesnake does on TV. The head rose up so quickly, high above the ground, hinged open to reveal the stark, brilliant white of the inside of its mouth.

I felt everything drop away from me. Adrenaline hammered into every cell capable of feeling, and everything inside went cold. I felt that I might actually pee.

It held me, just like in the poem, just like at the hospital, and when it slithered away I laughed hard, and then back in my hotel room the tears came. I thought I could smell the antiseptic sterility of the clinic and taste the metallic taste on my tongue after an infusion. The old panic and rage, the vibrating aliveness of the mundane details of my environment.

For days, after I met the copperhead, the thumb of fear was lifted.

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You can hear me reading this essay at the cool multimedia storytelling Web site Cowbird: http://cowbird.com/story/46898/Lifted/

Spring

March 9, 2012 in Amphibians, Biophilia, Personal, The Woods

I’m such a baby! Like most areas of the U. S., Western New York state has had one of the mildest winters in many years. This hasn’t stopped my complaining that it’s not ending soon enough. It’s because I’ve missed the amphibians!

My friends must be tired of hearing me moan about how long its been since I’ve photographed a Dusky, or been out on Toad Patrol. I can’t help it. I shot my last salamander in October. There have been long stretches of weeks below 30 degrees. All winter I’ve been thinking about the Spotted salamanders, burrowed 18 inches underground. Treefrogs and peepers, tucked away in mysterious unknown crevices. Wood frogs, shallowly covered with leaf litter, frozen solid, while they wait for the warm days of rain.

Days like we’ve had for this past week!

Since March 1, I’ve made daily treks to the vernal pools, where many of the animals I’m waiting for will breed, as they slowly (SLOOOOOOOWLY!) fill.

A vernal pool slowly fills in the woods near my house.

Finally last night I was rewarded with small but bright scraps of hope. It was 35 degrees, and slushy snow fell with the rain. But I met, on my late night trek, a Jefferson salamander slowly making its way to the pond. A couple of chilly frogs bobbing at the surface near the edge of a puddle also filled me with relief and joy.

Today, snow intermittently falls between hours of sunshine that melt it. But out there my pals are waking up, stretching their little sausage legs and starting to wander about. I know that soon the place will be full of life, both old, new, and renewed. This short, easy winter has been long and difficult for me!

Thank you, Jefferson salamander, for not abandoning me!

Biophilia: A Walk in the Salamander Woods

October 13, 2011 in Amphibians, Biophilia, Kids and science, Personal, The Woods, Video

I feel privileged to live in a rural, heavily forested county in Western New York state. It allows me to invest significant time and energy in raising my daughter oriented toward exploration and connection with the natural features of our surrounding environment. This is E. O. Wilson’s biophilia hypothesis at work: humans adapted for living up close and personal with natural landscapes and the organisms that inhabit them.

This is on my mind because of the below footage I dug out of our family video archive from when my daughter was about 2 1/2 years old. It’s an outing to a section of walking trails near our home we refer to as ‘The Salamander Woods,’ for reasons that will be obvious from the video. I’ve edited it into about 3 minutes of representative curiosity and confidence my daughter displays moving about within this ecosystem under my guidance.

What’s striking to me about reviewing this footage is not just the knowledge and awareness such a young child is capable of possessing (identifying salamanders by species and recalling what slugs eat) but also her deep emotional connections to the natural world (tears of genuine disappointment when we overturn a log and find nothing lurking underneath).

Also, I’m astonished that my clumsy genetics have produced such staggeringly adorable cuteness!

I first became interested in biophilia when I noticed the detrimental effects on my own feelings of well being during periods when I lived separated from natural landscapes (which I hope to write about here in the future). As the sociobiologist and evolutionist David Sloan Wilson says in this interview [he raises the subject for a few minutes beginning around 21:00], biophilia is a testable hypothesis. I’d like to see more investigative work done on this in my own discipline of communication. How do patterns of rhetoric and emotion change depending on whether communication occurs within natural landscapes or following interaction with animals, walking in the woods, etc. I think these are questions that could be studied, and could help us further understand our relationships with the natural world.  I expect to return to writing about biophilia often in future posts, since it’s a hypothesis that has keenly captured my interest.

In the meantime, I hope you enjoy this video!