Wednesday, April 27, 2016

Rats

As our humble abode is bordered in the back by thick overgrowth and tangles of unidentified, flowering tree bushes, we share our property with quite the variety of wildlife. We enjoy the screeching of blue jays, the mating dances of humming birds, the quiet grass-nibbling of small rabbits, and the daring, darting commute of rats.

Rats. While many humans choose to poison them (and thereby poison a good deal of other animals in the process), I choose to give them safe passage. My family cares for them in the hot summer months, leaving water in shaded places. The presence of our aging black lab begets their utter lack of interest to dwell within our home, although we do occasionally hear them bump about in the walls. No matter. On those occasions, we simply clear the repeated growth of foliage along the foundation of the house. When they lack a private road, they cease their unnecessry squatting.

I have a history with rats. Or rather, my history with one rat in particular has given me a certain obligation to all ratkind.

My double-digit youth was a mess of slouching hostility. Housed against my will in the nether-reaches of an area known as Devil's Gap, a failed runaway, I stared at my walls, read countless books, memorized the poetry of Edgar Allan Poe. At times I would keep peculiar hours in order to avoid my family. I fantasized about being institutionalized, and read Joanne Greenberg's novel "I Never Promised You a Rose Garden" several times. To this day I regularly tell people, "You can like it. or you can lump it," and even keep a painting I created years later of Anterrabae (which sadly is currently molding in the humidity of my home). I napped in the sparse forest near our house. Sleep was better by day. I tried to kill myself.

One night, lying awake in my bed that was roomed in the unfinished basement beneath my father's triple-wide, I heard a distinct scritching. A creature was in my room. A living creature, busy with independent nocturnal purposes, was with me. And in that place and time of my heart's uncertain subsistence, it was a very welcome interruption in the dark silence. It sounded too large to be a mouse, although I'm not sure why. Perhaps the occasional loud thump of its body as it turned within the bookcase gave me the impression of a rat. Listening to the animal accomplish its secret investigations, I fell asleep... and something changed in me.

To the best of my ability, I sent out the mental promise to the visitor that it would have refuge in my room. The household cat, an alert and deadly mouser, would not be allowed past my door. In my mind, I put no demands or limits upon it -- just the promise of being undisturbed in its work of staying alive.

As its visits became more regular, I left off calling the creature an it, and assigned him the male gender. He spread his territory to include the upper side of my ceiling, and I occasionally was humored by the sound of shiny objects rolling above me. A few of my rings disappeared, as did the apple seed necklace that was of no importance to me.

My perception of life improved as I contemplated the rat frequently and wove private stories of him in my mind. He lent to me his insistence to exist, a revolutionary motivation that gave me a sense of place in a world that kept trying to insist that I did not exist. To me he became a timely benefactor in a rat's body.

I do not remember for how long we maintained this friendship, or which one of us was the first to leave. I hope he lived to a satisfying old age and enjoyed the objects slyly looted from the mess of my habitation. He will never know what he meant to me.

Close to thirty years have passed, and I still think about my friend, the rat. In his honor, I give his cousins safe passage on our property (apologizing for the interloping executions performed by the careless crows). Logic and reason prevail over this relationship, and I know my kindness is just an echo of what once was. And yet, I watch as these creatures daily fulfill their insistence to exist. It is life, and it encourages me to take my part in it.

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