Unexpected Birth
By Allison Salerno
During my eighth period hall-walking duty, I heard a commotion in the downstairs hallway by the high school's gym. The school nurse, who was standing with the school's security officer and a local police officer, told me a deer had given birth to two fawns in an outside alcove. Staff and students had watched while the new mom hustled into the woods with one of her newborns, leaving the other fawn in the shade of our concrete building. Worry filled the air: what would happen to the new fawn?
After the final bell rang, I stopped by the main office to return the radio and check my mailbox. One of the secretaries ran in. She reported to her colleagues that the mother deer had returned and was feeding her fawn. "This is so endearing," she said as she caught her breath. We all laughed at her inadvertent pun.
Why did the sight of this deer and her fawns strike so many? After all, the suburbs are overrun with deer. Most people see them as a nuisance. They nibble on front-lawn flowers, they carry Lyme disease and they wander onto highways.They're sometimes called "rats with hooves."
And yet, these unexpected events - the giving birth, the mother leaving, the fawn waiting her return and the mother returning to feed her fawn - interrupted the reality of a busy high school. These events woke me up to the fact that the reality we see in front of us is not the only reality.
"Life is hunger, thirst, and passion for an ultimate object, which looms over the horizon, and yet always lies beyond it. When this is recognized, man becomes a tireless searcher. "
During my eighth period hall-walking duty, I heard a commotion in the downstairs hallway by the high school's gym. The school nurse, who was standing with the school's security officer and a local police officer, told me a deer had given birth to two fawns in an outside alcove. Staff and students had watched while the new mom hustled into the woods with one of her newborns, leaving the other fawn in the shade of our concrete building. Worry filled the air: what would happen to the new fawn?
After the final bell rang, I stopped by the main office to return the radio and check my mailbox. One of the secretaries ran in. She reported to her colleagues that the mother deer had returned and was feeding her fawn. "This is so endearing," she said as she caught her breath. We all laughed at her inadvertent pun.
Why did the sight of this deer and her fawns strike so many? After all, the suburbs are overrun with deer. Most people see them as a nuisance. They nibble on front-lawn flowers, they carry Lyme disease and they wander onto highways.They're sometimes called "rats with hooves."
And yet, these unexpected events - the giving birth, the mother leaving, the fawn waiting her return and the mother returning to feed her fawn - interrupted the reality of a busy high school. These events woke me up to the fact that the reality we see in front of us is not the only reality.
"Life is hunger, thirst, and passion for an ultimate object, which looms over the horizon, and yet always lies beyond it. When this is recognized, man becomes a tireless searcher. "
What a sweet story. I hope mother and baby are fine.
ReplyDeleteWhat a heartwarming story! Thank you for sharing it.
ReplyDelete