Life and Death are Lovers

Posted on 07. Jan, 2010 by in Blog

The other night while my younger son, Simon, and I were driving home, excited about the prospect of watching The Matrix (a long-awaited experience for him) a fox jumped out in front of our car. I had never, in all my 44 years, hit an animal yet the experience felt eerily familiar; a flash of golden fur caught in the bright headlights and a heart-breaking ‘thud’.

skeleton in the desertWe both began to cry, almost before our conscious minds had time to process what had happened. We backed up, pulled over, put our hazards on and got out of the car. The fox was a young one, maybe five months at most. His head lay in a pool of vibrant red  but his small body, covered in thick rust-colored fur, was in perfect condition. His breath came in rhythmic heaves. And he felt vacant, as if ‘he’ wasn’t really there at all. We brought him to the side of the road thinking we’d wait with him for the few minutes it would take for him to stop breathing. Half an hour later, he was still heaving, his heart still beating at a furious pace. It was nearly zero degrees and we couldn’t stay with him by the side of the road any longer so we put him in the back of the car and brought him home. His body didn’t respond even as we bundled him up in sweaters, meant for Goodwill, from the back of our car.

At home we put him on our back porch, lit the chiminaya and sat vigil with him feeling certain it would be only a matter of minutes before he took his last breath. Three hours later his breathing had calmed and his heart at regulated. But there was no sign of life in him. His pupils were non-responsive as was his body to our touch. I traveled painfully between feeling certain we ought to assist him in his journey toward death (beyond what we had already done with our car hours earlier) and feeling protective of his right to die at his own pace. By midnight, as I sat down with him once more, after warming myself in the house for a few minutes, the conviction arrived solidly in me that I had the responsibility of helping him go.

I have never consciously taken another life. I realized as I sat in front of this miraculous, perfect canine body, that I had no idea how to do it. Simon told me that if I pressed on a certain spot at his throat I could successfully constrict his breath; I would strangle him. This seemed the best method. It turns out, of course, that it’s harder than they make it look in the movies. And this little fox’s life force was strong. It was as if his body hadn’t gotten the message that this life was over. His autonomic body wasn’t in communication, or perhaps was even in conflict with, that other less measurable part of him called ‘soul’. Twice I held him firmly, blocking his airway with one hand, the other hand placed on his heart to feel as the strong organ ceased. Twice I waited at least a minute or two after his heart stopped before releasing his throat. Twice, within moments of my releasing his throat, his body gasped, taking in a long strong draw of air. Yet, other than his heart beat and his lungs, nothing on him was animated. His body and his pupils were still non-responsive.

I became engaged in a battle with the primal programing of him, DNA that goes back to the beginning of life in the universe, whose sole task is to survive, no matter what. Despite the fact that his soul was long gone. Finally, sobbing and raging at the willfulness of life that did not care a bit for his well-being, I put his beautiful head, ears tipped with thick black fur, snout punctuated by sharp white teeth, into a plastic bag, placed my hand on his heart one final time, and cinched the opening tightly around his neck. Slowly but surely the fierce force of life that held him hostage left his body.

I spent the first years of my career as a therapist sitting with people as they died. I still remember the exact moment with each individual when the soul of them left their bodies. It’s a visceral, palpable experience. This fox’s life was over but his body’s prime directive continued. I felt in him, both life and death; lovers entwined in an ancient dance of mutuality; the vesica piscis created by the two encompassing all life as we know it.

We two-leggeds have attached judgment to this dance. We take the process of death personally. Of course we do. But in the process of this egoic act we devalue one half of this necessary partnership. We try to take death out of this lovership, without which – of course – there is no life. I’m fairly certain this fox wasn’t taking anything personally. Environmental Studies professor and writer Neil Evernden talks about this relationship of life among creatures other than the two-leggeds. Nothing is personal. It’s all a dance. The coyote and the rabbit are like lovers in many ways and in the process of the hunt, a reverential ceremony, occurs the necessary love making dance between life and death. The offspring of this love making is the birth of life in its new form. Upon being caught the rabbit will often literally succumb, offering itself to this process in which its life force will simply take up a new residency, leaving the rabbit body and entering the coyote for a time before moving on as the coyote deposits its scat on the earth. Death is the end of one thing and, at the very same moment, it is the beginning of another. Energy doesn’t cease. All life energy remains vital, though it changes shape many times over. Over and over. In the constant dance between these two eternally intertwined forces, in their love making, lies the meat of what it means to be alive.

I learned this again, in a way so much more intimate than anything I had ever experienced before, as I sat with the fox for those five hours. And I came away with a fervant wish for our species, especially those of us who live in cultures that have institutionally estranged ourselves from death. I wish for us that we re-acquaint ourselves with the integral relationship between life and death; judging neither as ‘good’ or ‘bad’. Grief and rage are beautifully reverent responses to the loss of a loved one. And fear is an understandable byproduct of the uncertainty of life for a creature endowed with a consciousness of its own life. But none of this makes inevitable our wholesale vilification of death. Nor does it require that we imagine life, at all costs, is preferable to its eternal mate, death.

In an effort to offer this fox back into the relationship his kind innately have with the wild world, the next day Simon and I brought him out to a wilderness area just outside of town; a place where we have seen and heard coyotes running in packs of great numbers. We laid him in the soft bowl between snow covered knolls a distance off-trail. We apologized for our violent part in changing the course of his life-of-great-promise and we asked the ravens, vultures, racoons and coyotes to find him and consume him.

This afternoon, at sunset, I went on a run out to this spot to see what has become of him. His body was gone, nothing left but abundant canine footprints and a wide swath made by the fox’s body as it was dragged, all trailing off into the thick underbrush. I am convinced that what was his life force is now alive and well again, having morphed itself gracefully and willfully into its next iteration.

2 Responses to “Life and Death are Lovers”

  1. Sage 14 January 2010 at 5:39 pm #

    Telling Our Stories
    –Lucille Clifton

    the fox came every evening to my door
    asking for nothing. my fear
    trapped me inside, hoping to dismiss her
    but she sat till morning, waiting.
    at dawn we would, each of us,
    rise from our haunches, look through the glass
    then walk away.
    did she gather her village around her
    and sing of the hairless moon face,
    the trembling snout, the ignorant eyes?

    child, I tell you now it was not
    the animal blood i was hiding from,
    it was the poet in her, the poet and
    the terrible stories she could tell.
    ***

    Straight Talk from Fox
    –Mary Oliver (from Red Bird)

    Listen says fox it is music to run
    over the hills to lick
    dew from the leaves to nose along
    the edges of the ponds to smell the fat
    ducks in their bright feathers but
    far out, safe in their rafts of
    sleep. It is like
    music to visit the orchard, to find
    the vole sucking the sweet of the apple, or the
    rabbit with his fast-beating heart. Death itself
    is a music. Nobody has ever come close to
    writing it down, awake or in a dream. It cannot
    be told. It is flesh and bones
    changing shape and with good cause, mercy
    is a little child beside such an invention. It is
    music to wander the black back roads
    outside of town no one awake or wondering
    if anything miraculous is ever going to
    happen, totally dumb to the fact of every
    moment’s miracle. Don’t think I haven’t
    peeked into windows. I see you in all your seasons
    making love, arguing, talking about God
    as if he were an idea instead of the grass,
    instead of the stars, the rabbit caught
    in one good teeth-whacking hit and brought
    home to the den. What I am, and I know it, is
    responsible, joyful, thankful. I would not
    give my life for a thousand of yours.
    ***

    Red
    –Mary Oliver (also from Red Bird)

    All the while
    I was teaching
    in the state of Virginia
    I wanted to see
    gray fox.
    Finally I found him.
    He was in the highway.
    He was singing
    his death song.
    I picked him up
    and carried him
    into a field
    while the cars kept coming.
    He showed me
    how he could ripple
    how he could bleed.
    Goodbye I said
    to the light of his eye
    as the cars went by.
    Two mornings later
    I found the other.
    She was in the highway.
    She was singing
    her death song.
    I picked her up
    and carried her
    into the field
    where she rippled
    half of her gray
    half of her red
    while the cars kept coming.
    While the cars kept coming.
    Gray fox and gray fox.
    Red, red, red.
    ***

    Ezra & I found a squirrel on the road, still living. We pulled a u-turn & scooped him up in a blanket. He is so beautiful, the colors and textures of his furry body and soft feathery expressive tail. I want to pet him, but there is the plague & I see the fleas move across his belly. He is unmarked by the car save for droplets of blood on his nose. He is breathing and his eyes are open. He stands and then falls on his side again and again. Ezra and I sit on the sidewalk and admire his beauty and wonder what to do. I call the vet. She reminds us of the plague and advises we don’t touch him (she wouldn’t). Well, too late for that. And we couldn’t leave him to get squished like your turtle friend. I call the wild animal shelter. The vet there would take him in if we bring him 30 miles. I ask the squirrel himself, “do you want to go away from your home here to the wild animal hospital in Espanola or stay here and perhaps die? Perhaps die either way?” He keels over and his legs go stiff. His breathing changes. Ezra thinks he’s dying. So we wait. He doesn’t improve. We decide to leave him and let him die without the further trauma of cars and needles and cages. We put him gently beneath a small pinon tree. We say goodbye and go on to our appointment with Christian & Theo. Four hours later it is dark & we are headed home. We pull over, find the flashlight & bumble through the cactus to the tree. He is still alive! Now he is on his feet with his tail curved over his back. But still unable to go anywhere. The people in the house come outside & ask what’s going on. We explain. They are kind & give us a box to hold him. We take him home and put him in an aquarium with a heating pad. i give him some water from an eye dropper. He is unbearably beautiful sleeping with his tail curved over his face. i think of him all night, getting up to see if he lives. In the morning we take him to Espanola. We wander around seeing the sanctuary’s bobcats and grey foxes and birds of prey. They give us a number for the squirrel so we can call in to check his progress: 009. We call 2 days later to learn he is out of ICU and has “perked up”. He is in an enclosure outside where they can watch him. Maybe he will live! If so, they will release him in a roadless place, maybe on Val Kilmer’s ranch in the Pecos Mountains. Then he will never see his mate again. She probably wonders where he went. Today I saw two more squirrels crushed on the road. And there are hawks and other predators wherever he goes. But still.

  2. George 2 December 2010 at 4:58 pm #

    Thank you for this wonderful article. I live on a road with a speed limit of 45. There is about a 30 curve right in front of my house. I have lost two dogs on this road. I have seen so many foxes, possums, and raccoons killed on this curve. About 30 minutes ago I noticed an animal laying in the road. It was a beautiful red fox. As I viewed the fox with my headlights, I noticed it was still breathing. I grabbed my shovel, and gently moved the fox off the road. I believe it was still breathing but did notice a small pool of blood where it’s head was. I hope the fox will have the strength to rebound…..Again, thanks for your wonderful article.


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