Turtle the Chimney “Sweep”

On Monday as I was leaving the office I found, at the bottom of the steps outside our back door, a mother and her teenage daughter mulling over what to do about an injured bird. As our steps lead almost directly to the street, the bird had possibly been hit by a car. It was stunned with one wing oddly askew like it might be broken. I stopped to assess the damage. It was as if we all knew, the mother, the daughter, me and maybe even the bird that I was the one taking it home.

The mother and daughter wouldn’t know this but I had once successfully raised a baby crow who lived voluntarily in our trees for quite a while after it fledged. I could come outside and yell its name and down it flew to land on my arm for a snack. After I thought it was grown and gone it twice returned injured for a safe place to recover. But that was a baby I’d once fed mashed up worms. It remembered it’s mama Crow. Crows have long memories. This bird, which I first thought was a swallow and later proved to be a chimney swift, hadn’t intentionally sought me out…or had it. Injured animals seem to gravitate toward me. I used to take evening walks to the local courthouse to watch the swifts come in. We called them “sweeps”. My work office is less than one block from that same courthouse. The bird had been injured and landed in the path I take every day. Unbeknownst to me a co-worker had seen it four hours earlier and had decided to leave it but check on it later. Then, the mother/daughter duo worried over it but had no intentions of touching or moving it. I am no stranger to animal rescue. I immediately picked it up. Because of Covid I still had plastic gloves readily available. Thanks to the Beverly Hillbillies there is probably a whole slew of women my age who grew up with the nickname Ellie May for their propensity to capture injured animals and try to nurse them back to health. That’s what Mom called me but I was rarely successful. Nature is a great teacher.

It was a hard lesson to learn but it’s often better to let nature take its course…unless I know there is something I can do. I am quicker to recognize impending death these days. But I still can’t leave the dying to die alone. In this case, my instinct to take the bird might have also been driven by my attempt to relieve the mother’s guilt for disappointing a brooding teenage daughter. I could tell they both needed to think they had done all they could. I could give them that. I took the bird because that’s what I do. I couldn’t let it lay in the gravel and grass until a neighborhood cat decided to make it a toy, or the sun dehydrated it. I thought at the very least, I’d give its death some dignity. It wouldn’t be the first time I’d provided this service. Death Doula to people and animals. Even as I placed it in a cardboard box, I dreaded telling my boyfriend/housemate about our new roomy. He wasn’t around for my dog rescue days so he may not be fully aware of my proclivities to drag in injured animals.

First, I took it to the same veterinarian who helped me with dog rescue to see if its wing was indeed broken. “Looks like it is fractured,” she confirmed. She did not set bird wings but gave me the name of another veterinarian who treated birds. Selfishly I wondered what it might cost and if I was willing to bear that cost. Domestic pets, it turns out, are the only birds veterinarians treat. I called three vets who all said to call wildlife rescue. The only wildlife rescue I could find informed me their Kentucky affiliates had no permit for songbirds which meant the swift and I were on our own. As I write this, it occurs to me, my daughter is attending the latest Taylor Swift Album release in a movie theater. She is decidedly a “swiftie”. I have never listened to Taylor Swift’s music but this little bird has turned me into a “swiftie” as well. Its slim cigar-like torso and pointed wings, the gray top feathers melting into a snowy underside and the sweet way it turned its head to look directly at me when I held it in front of my face or slowly closed its eyes when I stroked its back, made me fall in love. Its beak was as delicate and tiny and black as the tip of a cat’s toenails, but not curved. Looking straight on, its eyes and short bill resembled the face of a turtle, so that’s what I called it. Turtle. It should be said that both sexes look alike in this species and I have no way of knowing whether Turtle was male or female. I deemed her female for no good reason at all.

I hate that we rely on google for so much of our information these days but it is a wealth of knowledge. I did read in my old-fashioned bird books as much as I could about the species, but they don’t tell what to do if you find one with a broken wing. Anyway, google said to keep it still and in a dark place to prevent further injury and then immediately take it to wildlife rescue. Immediately. So much for that advice. I did start it out in a small cardboard box with a makeshift nest of dried grass. The way it climbed up and positioned itself on the side of the box made me research further and realize it was a chimney swift. Whenever I picked it up, its talons clung to my finger like a baby’s first instinct to grasp, another tip that it was a swift. Turns out chimney swifts don’t perch on branches like other birds. They fly for hours or even days at a time, taking their food on the wing. They are aerial acrobats, almost always moving. Most of their diet consists of flying insects so they are extremely beneficial to humans in that way, cleaning up mosquitos and other pests. When they do land for the evening or to make a nest, they cling to the inside of a hollow tree…or a chimney or other tunnel-like structure. Their clinging feet are necessary to adhere to vertical, sometimes slick, surfaces. I anthropomorphized this grasping behavior as if the bird were holding onto me for its very life. That kind of oxytocin release reminded me of all the dog rescue I engaged in during my empty nest years.

Hundreds of dogs I took home from the shelter, bathed and housed. (All dogs come home from the shelter with the same foul odor.) It only took the first bath after leaving the shelter for a dog to follow me faithfully and make me their person. I knew what I was doing while I was doing it—avoiding the pain of my daughter’s impending exit, the truth of my dysfunctional marriage—but I ran into all kinds of rescue folk over the years who were unaware of the lonely hole they were desperately trying to fill. It’s easy to believe an animal loves you when you’ve intervened on their behalf. For the most part, I kept my head about me. The veterinarians I worked with liked my ability to be realistic. Once I knew a dog’s personality, I ran a match-making service with local families to place it in a forever home. I became addicted to learning each personality and it’s true the feel-good sensation of unconditional love is immeasurable. Rescue work is rewarding, but dirty and filled with harsh realities.

I was right about my boyfriend’s response. Gregg was mostly concerned about diseases and insisted I disinfect every place I’d even set the box. I explained that the bird was in a small box which was inside a bigger box so there were two layers between it and any surface. He didn’t buy it. I googled again to find that chimney swifts aren’t known for carrying diseases and are no threat to humans. Sometimes their nests attract mites but I had no nest. Histoplasmosis is a fungus that can grow in bird poop once it has composted but it doesn’t exist in the poop itself as it comes from the bird. I hoped this might waylay Gregg’s fears but I doubted he’d be any happier. He insisted I leave the bird and its box outside.

I wondered how I was going to feed “Turtle”.  They prefer to catch insects in the air but that was not likely from inside a box. Although I did catch a couple of spiders and a fly for her. She was either not impressed or still in shock from the jolt that upended her carefree existence. The book said when insects were scarce swifts would eat seeds or berries so I placed both in a shallow dish alongside a saucer of water. I knew not to force feed with a dropper for fear of setting up pneumonia but I did offer a droplet near her mouth and it opened for two swallows of water.  

After the first night, I thought the tiny bird needed some daylight to inspire its recovery. I didn’t have a bird cage but I exchanged its dark box for a small cat carrier. I attached hardware cloth on the door’s grid to prevent escape or the patient’s cock-eyed wing from getting stuck through the openings. The new space brought new movement. That screened door became her favorite roosting spot since it was easy to hold onto. I still couldn’t tell if she was eating but the food got dispersed as she moved about the cage so at least she knew it was there. Gregg knew I was concerned and joked that I could tie its feet to a string and swing it in the air to catch insects. He thinks he’s funny. But then he did have an interesting idea of putting a piece of fruit in the cage to attract insects, which I tried.

I didn’t have any real expectation that the bird would live. I thought at most it wouldn’t die by predator. But as one day turned to two and then three with more activity each day, I started to think of possibilities. I decided I’d give it a couple more days in the cat carrier and graduate it to a dog crate. I have a large one left from my humane society days because with me, you never know. I would create a chimney in one corner so it could roost properly and if I saw it gliding down from there, even for two wing flutters, I would find a safe place to open the cage and see if it could take flight. Then, I worried that it would live but not fly. Was I prepared for long-term care? What kind of life would it be to go from aerial freedom to living in a cage? Neither of us wanted that. I envisioned building a greenhouse, something I’d been wanting anyway, so it could have some semblance of an outdoor life. It was curious to me how many images google had of chimney swifts sitting in the palm of someone’s hand. I had taken that picture myself. Most bird pictures aren’t featured in someone’s hand. Do people make pets of them? I read that some swifts have been known to live as long as 12 years in the right conditions, yet the average lifespan is about two years. I had no idea how old this bird was. She looked so young and delicate to me yet she was the size of a full grown swift.

Then, on Thursday night, she died. It had been her most active morning and I’d seen her climbing the wire door in the middle of the day but by nightfall, she lay face down on the bottom of the cage. She could have starved but she pooped every day so I thought not. Maybe her body couldn’t take the shock. My guess after the fact is that she had an infection which I had not known to treat. I know she would have died anyway, without my intervention. Still, I wish I could have done better by her. I really don’t know how I would have administered antibiotics but I will think about it next time…because…there will be a next time.

 I am grateful to Turtle for bringing me a whole new awareness and appreciation for chimney swifts. They are amazing creatures with a soft heart and a gentle soul. I don’t know if I made what was left of her life better or worse, but I know this: Death is a sacred act. I have witnessed it many times, with humans and with animals. It is sad to say goodbye, but it is an honor and a privilege to hold space in those last holy moments. At least she didn’t die alone. Fly away, little Turtle, fly away.  

Intuition: It’s Elemental June 2023

It stormed last night. This morning I worked the softened soil around the garden plants to remove weeds, built a fire in the back yard pit to burn broken limbs from heavy winds. As the fire crackles, I sit on my back porch with Willow, our German Shepherd, enjoying a slight breeze, barely enough to intone a single, deep meditative OM sound on the windchime.

Willow’s ears perk up, perfect triangle receivers, alert to some far-off presence only she can detect. This is stillness, peaceful and quiet in the way only nature can be. Yet, there is a choir of birdsong so concordant that even the app on my phone can’t keep up with who’s saying what. All creatures of earth and sky are moving, changing, chanting, feeding, creating, evolving. They are making space for me. I am listening, learning, wondering, appreciating, allowing, accepting, making space for them. All elements are present. This is prayer. This is church.

I know that I have to stop the chatter in my own head (my ego), in order to open the door to the other side. What’s on the other side? Imagination, creativity, answers, ideas, words, spirit, connection, intuition, love, faith. In another word, GOD.

Once the door is open, I am aware that it will close all too soon. These “gasps of joy” are fleeting because of my own human frailty, but joyous. They can be a moment of calm or peace that overcomes my well-placed obstacles to connect me mind, body and spirit. It can be an idea or word or a turn of phrase that inspires me to get lost in my writing. Sometimes the words that come inside my head, are in a different voice, I think to remind me that they are a gift and not of my own doing. I muse that maybe that’s what Willow is hearing when she perks up her ears. Maybe she talks to angels. She is certainly in touch with all the nature spirits, my sentinel. I wish it was that easy. Just perk up my ears and hear Spirit talking to me. Oh yeah, it is! It’s called intuition. It takes practice though, and patience and desire and confidence and trust. I’m still working on it. It’s been my lifelong journey.

The spiritual connections that are most prevalent for me come at night, when I’m dreaming. My dreams are often vivid metaphors that enlighten me to truths I have denied. A “knowing” that is buried. A message from the other side. Whether we are aware of our surroundings or not, our brains and our physical bodies are constantly absorbing pieces of information. Body language of the people we speak to, sounds of nature alerting us to weather changes, the dynamics of close relationships, unspoken facts, the things our loved ones won’t admit. If you are empathic, like me, you also feel in your body the energies that surround you, good and bad. What lives in the subconscious gets processed while sleeping, like placing files in a file cabinet in case you need it later. I know there are a lot of people who believe they don’t dream. Scientifically, it has been proven that everybody dreams.  

Whether you remember your dreams or not, your body and brain are still processing your experiences and helping them make sense to you. All that knowing lives inside you whether you ever expose it or not. This is part of your intuition. What a deal! Everybody has access to it. Those who call themselves intuitives are only those people who have become still enough, often enough to hone their skills of listening and they’ve learned to trust their hunches and they’ve been right enough times to build confidence. But we’re all intuitive if we choose to pay attention.  For me, enjoying this kind of awareness is being in conversation with God. The guidance is there if we get out of our own way. Whether you call it God, Goddess, Holy Spirit, a close personal relationship with Jesus, support from the Universe, Intuition, Synchronicity, talking to Angels, knowing… it’s all part of the same energy. I believe my dog Willow knows this already, that all things are connected. Sitting on my porch, I am one with my surroundings.

There is a quote I like to repeat often, by French Jesuit Priest Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, “You are not a human being having a spiritual experience. You are a spiritual being having a human experience.” This puts everything in my life into perspective. It is a very human trait to want to name everything according to our own comfort levels and judge others for not agreeing with us. That is ego, the most human experience there is. If we are in our authentic truth, connected to that which is spiritual, we have less time for pointing fingers, condemning and judging others. We will see plenty within ourselves that could use lifting up to a higher vibration of being. We have lots of work to do. I know I do.

I heard someone say that prayer is talking to God and meditation is listening. I like that explanation. Talking less and listening more, in any situation, is how we learn. I believe God uses any and all means to help us stay connected. Source wants to be in communication with us. It brings joy. Sometimes, the answer to a prayer comes in the form of words spoken by a happenchance interaction with a friend or stranger. How cool is that? Sometimes our connection to Spirit comes when dreaming. If we’re still enough, and in our bodies fully enough, we can know God’s presence by what we feel, hear or see. Intuition is nothing more than that. It doesn’t come from us. We are not “the power” because when given the chance, our ego will always guide us in the wrong direction. But God lines up the truth all around us and we have access to it through intentional awareness. I believe intuition is communication with God’s power living within us but we have to set aside the ego to hear it. Not an easy task.

Instead of convincing others to come to “our church” to listen to “our way of being” we could teach people how to be still and listen to what God says to them, whether it be in church or on the back porch listening to birdsong and the crackling of wood in the firepit, the wind in the leaves of trees or the gong of a windchime. Earth, Fire, Water, Air. The elements of God are all around us. I am grateful for the Holy Mystery.