Sunday, September 27, 2009

The Search for Enlightenment and Creativity

I'm reading Perfect Madness by Donna Lee Gorrell. Very thought provoking book detailing her journey to enlightenment with numerous quotes from zen masters and the like. There is much to be learned from her book yet there is something that doesn't quite ring true - like how should I know as I am far from enlightened? Still, and perhaps it's the innate weakness of the written word which always fails to convey real meaning (describe the colour yellow for instance), there is always this quiet and insistent jangling underlying the text, as if it is written by someone who has done extensive research but doesn't really know the unknowable. I don't know. Maybe it's the cynic or the green eyed monster (I'll have what she's having). Maybe it's just guilt as I've done nothing creative or constructive in weeks. My book languishes on the hard drive. I haven't even looked at it. I'm not painting or drawing anything. I read, play with Dimitri and hide from the dust (a second dust storm swept through yesterday and everything is again covered with a reddish brown film). It's self-disgust- such a useless emotion except when it gets to be too much one is finally motivated to get off one's arse and do something. Ah, notice how I went from using the word 'I' to the word 'one'? A quick and easy way to distance myself from aspects I don't like about myself. Okay, so when it gets to be too much I am finally motivated to get off my arse and do something. Much better. I'm not meditating either despite many opportunities to do so. What is this self-defeating system that I believe I share with many other people. Lack of self-discipline? Perhaps but I suspect it stems from fear. Not doing anything means I'm not putting myself out there. I can't fail because I haven't tried. Each time my days off roll around I swear it will be different. I'll get stuck in; write, paint, meditate, do yoga, all the things that make me feel better for having done them. And then I disappoint myself. It is easy to stay busy with housework and things that appear to be constructive but are really empty. Creativity is akin to God (I still have trouble with that word, that concept - I like the Power That Is, The Source, etc. but they are wordy). God created the world and the universe and God created me with the ability to create. Isn't that a terrific gift? The most marvelous gift - and I sit on it and do nothing.
I work with a kid once a week who is in a band. A heavy metal band. This school holiday he and his mates are putting together a clip to put on You Tube. We were talking about it and he said I probably wouldn't like his type of music. I said he was probably right but that didn't matter. The most important thing was he was making something with his friends that hadn't existed before. They were creating something totally new. Each of us has wisdom to share or we teach best what we most need to learn. So on that note, I'm going to go do something creative even if it's just a pencil sketch of Dimitri leaning into this dusty dry wind.

Friday, September 25, 2009

Dust Storms, Dimitri and The Eternal Now

September 25, 2009. Have to hurry as we've company coming for drinks and munchies in a bit over an hour. We had a dust storm come through a couple of days ago. It hit Sydney and moved north through Brisbane and further up the coast. I looked out through the surgery window and it was like I'd put red cellophane over my eyes. Very weird. Not scary weird like the light looks before a tornado or a severe storm, or even during a partial eclipse, just weird. 18,000 tons an hour dropped over the land -- all from South Australia so they say. The dust covers everything. In this old Queenslander, full of gaps and holes, it entered without any hindrance despite the house being 'shut up'. In a house over a 100 years old you can't make it airtight. I've dusted and mopped and dusted some more and sort of succeeded in smearing it around a bit. I cleaned the keys on this keyboard yet can still feel it, slippery like talcum powder, beneath my fingers. I can smell it too. When it is dampened it smells a little like it does before rain. Apparently it is possible we'll have another one coming in the next day or two, hopefully not as severe. What drove the dust was the wind.
I'm concerned about Dimitri as he took a header this morning from the perch and bit his tongue (I think). His beak appears intact but there was blood dripping from his mouth. He will take the odd sunflower seed but very tentatively. I've piled padding all around the perch so if he decides to try and fly at least he'll have a softer landing. R says take the tree perch away and perhaps it should be removed yet it is his favourite spot. He is up high (when he's on it he's just above eye level with me) and can see out and about. I think it's important that he learns to live effectively with his disability. Perhaps I'll change my mind and remove it but I don't think so.
I've been trying to live consciously, my mantra (when I think of it!) The Eternal Now. The eternity of the present. There is no other time, no other reality but this endless Now. It does help to center me when I become agitated. Like when Dimitri hurt himself. I was bitten this week by a dog suffering from tick paralysis who just went beserk. I was trying to lower him to the ground from the table as he was thrashing so hard I thought if he broke free he'd fling himself to the ground. I had him by the scruff but he managed to twist around and lock onto my arm. I didn't center myself very well then. It bloody hurt too much. Later however, when it was aching and I had trouble flexing my hand (bruising to the tendons I think) I did much better. I do believe one can heal oneself through the power and energy of thought. I know I have done so sometimes. I'm pretty useless with headaches and nausea but have had success with other things. Anyway, I sent healing energy to my arm and it's looking pretty darn good now. And feels pretty darn good too.
Best get cracking and feed up. You know, it's quite a miracle being alive and breathing. Makes me happy.

Thursday, September 17, 2009

More Dimitri and, darn it, the quarry

This could get a bit boring for non-bird people. I have Tachimedes, the normal male cockatiel, sitting on the CPU singing. I've just sat down after 15 minutes of working with Dimitri, the new Little Corella I wrote of in my last post. Having to work for two and a half days interrupts the training/getting acquainted. Only get to say hello in the morning. He's in bed by the time I get home. Yesterday, however, was a half day and that was most fruitful. I used the Power Pause, found on You Tube. It is a method of gaining the trust of fearful birds. Basically it means when Dimitri shows any sign of nervousness when approached, I stop moving until his body language indicates he has relaxed again. I also incorporate some of the body language I use with horses. I look around with soft eyes, soften my leg joints, move my legs about a bit (without shifting my feet), use my arms in a relaxed low key manner. Most importantly I stop staring. It is so easy to become fixated on gaining his trust, it becomes a competition; fixed hard eyes, fixed hard body - looking exactly what I don't want to look like, a predator. This morning he was taking seeds from me while on his tree perch. Yippee. He freaked a bit when I moved to the other side (is it like horses, that you have to introduce new things to both eyes as each eye is aligned - in a sense - with the two halves of the brain?). Anyway, he threatened to jump which is very bad as he just crashes. He could shatter his breast bone doing that so it's very important that he never has any reason to feel that afraid. I moved as far away as I could and when he was still upset, just left the verandah altogether. Later, I tried again but only asked him to take seeds while I was directly in front of him. That worked much better.
Dimitri has been sitting on his tree while I've been in here. The office is off the verandah, like the short end of an 'L'. He didn't know it existed before as the door has always been shut. Thought I'd let him know there was another room so went out, said g'day, gave him a couple of seeds (no big deal attitude mirrored beautifully by Dimitri) and then returned. He just walked up this end and looked in. I said hello and he left again, too much pressure. Would've been better if I'd just glanced and said nothing. He can roam around the verandah without supervision as it's pretty bird safe, even from his strong beak, but in here he must be supervised as all the computer wiring is on the floor.
We have a new hiccup in that the released Sulphur Crested Cockatoo, Algernon, who's been free for four or five years now?, has taken interest in Dimitri. He hangs off the gutter looking for all the world like a white bat. He has even tried to chew his way through the screen. We are sitting on this problem for the moment. We hope Algernon will recognise that Dimitri is a corella and not a S.C. Cockatoo. If he doesn't then we may have to think about capturing Algernon and re-releasing him at the original release site -- where there are many local cockatoos, unlike here where there are none. The pressure is on Algernon as we approach breeding season.
Just got the very bad news that the company which applied to quarry the mountain has appealed against the decision by council to refuse the application. We are registering as respondents by election to appear in the Planning and Environment court to fight this. So it goes on, as it has since 1993. I'm so tired of it but think there's a reason it's happening now - because we have endured, we have fought it and will continue to do so. There are others who care and who fight but no one has put as much effort and time in it as R. I've done my bit too but he has been phenomenal. Of course, the council will bear the brunt. Most of it is out of our hands. We can only add our voices to those who wish to see the end of this saga. In the grand scheme of the world it is only a little thing - but that remnant vegetation is worth the fight. The word remnant is the key. Lose this piece of endangered habitat and remnant may change to extinct.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

bare eyed corella

Writing has come to a halt. Most of my days off have been spent on the verandah trying to reassure and befriend a Little Corella I've named Dimitri. He was captured with a broken wing (dead bone protruding from the wing) after spending a week in a park, earthbound. The wing could not be saved and was amputated. He appears to be a juvenile and although understandably wary and shy does not panic when approached. He lives in a cockatoo cage with the other birds on the verandah. At night, because it's so cold (real desert weather, clear skies and minimal humidity make for warm days and frigid nights) he is taken, cage and all, into the spare room with a heat lamp. Because of having his wing removed a palm sized area of skin is exposed to the air so he can't control body temperature. In the mornings, when it has warmed up, he's brought back to the verandah.
R has built him a ladder which leads from the cocky cage to the ground, and a 'tree' made up of a branch inserted into the stand of an old floor fan. I wrapped the bottom of the stand with rope so he can climb it which he did finally today.
Taming birds is a study in patience. It's a very good prescription for me as I'm not the most patient of people. But birds motivate me. If I can be patient for anything, it's animals (and conversely the most impatient, especially when a dog which knows the command to come, nicks off anyway!). So rather than writing, or doing anything 'worthwhile', I've spent most of my days off sitting on the verandah with Dimitri. Just sitting for the most part. Sitting near him reading a book, lying on the floor near him (hiding behind a pot plant) gazing out at the torelliana trees, perched on a doormat gazing at him. It will take weeks, perhaps months before he trusts me. Even though he takes sunflower seeds from my hands and will allow me to touch his feet and breast (preparatory to the step up command) and has even allowed me, albeit reluctantly, to scratch his head it is more good manners and a mild temperament rather than trust or friendliness. I have to prove myself to him, not the other way around. The carer said he bites but he hasn't bitten yet. He 'mouths' my fingers sometimes, a way parrots have of exploring something new.
Tomorrow is a concern. Dimitri doesn't like it in the cage - and why would he? He's in prison in a prison. Even when he's loose on the verandah, the verandah is still enclosed. He doesn't know why he can't fly. He doesn't understand why he's gone from a wild free flying bird to a flightless bird in captivity. He doesn't know that these huge upright beings mean him no harm. It's a prison sentence without reason. When I'm home he spends most of the day loose because I stay out there with him. R is unwilling to let him out of his cage while I'm at work because he, understandably, doesn't want to hang around monitoring him all day. If I was the kind of person who took a sickie because of having other plans I'd do it. Dimitri is a strong reason to do so but I can't. Not fair on my workmates. Anyway, he'll just have to tough it out. The interesting thing is he didn't get into any trouble today. He doesn't show any signs of wanting to chew - not that there's much to chew on anyway. He wants to sit quietly and I think with the tree that's exactly what he'd do. Just sit and be as close to a wild bird, sitting in a tree, as he could. Might be an idea to rig up food and water for him somehow. Poor Richard, I always come up with bigger and better plans.