Sprezzatura

Because neurotic is the new black....

Ann Nichols

Ann Nichols
Location
East Lansing, Michigan,
Birthday
December 31
Bio
I write, I read, I clean up after people and I worry about things. I have a chronic insufficiency of ironic detachment. My birthday isn't really December 31; it's March 22 but it won't let me change it.

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Salon.com
MAY 29, 2012 10:17AM

Consider the Bee......

Rate: 17 Flag

There is much in this world that leads us to believe that as humans, we are superior to other life forms. We have opposable thumbs, and the kind of intellect and consciousness that allow us to build more than a hive or a dam and shape our future with intellect rather than instinct. We have religions that teach us that we are “stewards” of the earth, as if we had somehow been handed a title by an unseen force who we may actually have invented.

We do not, often, look at ants as they carry a fallen comrade across our bathroom floor and consider whether we would do the same. We worry about how they got into our house, and how best to kill them. No one is going to be bothered to carry every ant, spider and fly outside – they are, after all, encroaching in our homes with their dirty little feet. We particularly hate stinging creatures like bees, hornets, and wasps. We say things like “I see a purpose for bees, at least honey bees, but the other ones don’t do anything useful.”

We are irrational, sentimental and blind about the earth. We love our own pets, and Bambi, and national parks, the sight of an untrammeled field of Purple Vetch by the highway or a perfect ripe strawberry. We also develop land that is the habitat of creatures, mess up the food chain, pollute the air and water, cut down forests to make houses and paper, drive cars down the block, and encourage farmers to grow cattle feed and raise animals in tiny pens that make them better food sources for people. More meat, more eggs, more milk, because we are exercising stewardship and dominion over the land. Because the land belongs to us and it is our right. Right?

Still, we crave nature even as we continue to destroy it. We plant gardens, feed birds, travel to unspoiled places and marvel at the miracle of a naturally-occurring waterfall, a spider web glistening with dew, flowers that open only at night and seem to glow white in the moist darkness of a summer night. No matter how many Disney’s, Dollywood’s, Imax theaters, French restaurants and pristine golf courses we create, most of us still feel the pull of a giant Harvest moon, a meteor shower, or a story about the way that elephants mourn. We still feel small and insignificant as we look out on the ocean or up at a mountain range. We are not the boss of this earth, but participants in a cooperative venture, doing our part alongside the worms that turn the earth and the rivers that carry water. If anything, our ability to dream and plan makes us more responsible to protect and preserve our habitat rather than destroying it.

Which leads me to this video, made by a kind of remarkable person who I have never met, but who I believe to be a kindred spirit.   I started the day reading about local farmers making a comeback growing not food, but corn and soy to feed Asian cattle, and I was sad. Then I read about legislation that would open the doors to wider use of genetically modified crops in my state and I was sadder. Then I saw this video, and I knew that there was still a balance in the world between those who would dominate and those who would coexist with respect, humility and compassion. Thank you, Algis Kemezys.

 

 

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We must be on the same wavelength this morning. The video is so dear....that is Algis with the bee? A brother from another mother.

BTW, you do know someone who carries every ant, spider, and fly outside, in a special cup for that purpose. In a 226 year old house, one can receive many visitors. My mouse roommate and I were just discussing this, as he enjoyed a brazen romp near the breadbox.
omg...I was first! Dig it, Joan H.!
I believe that is really Algis feeding and holding the bee. And I send a virtual but tasty 9-grain toast crumb to your mouse roommate.
The bee video is as sweet as honey~
I do carry bugs outside or coax them out the window.
I have to wait until I get home to see the video, unfortunately. I'm sure it will be worth the wait. ~r
This is truly a special day. Thanks so much for sharing such a positive thought and action that we all can perform. The deep satisfaction of doing so is really priceless.
Beautiful. One of the great values that farmers teach is to value the land and care for living things. What better example that Algis' video. Congrats to Algis and thanks Ann.
We are little more than mobile room and board for bacteria.
What a beautiful post and a beautiful video.
Lovely to see this...I am in the habit of escorting little brown lizards outside when they mistakenly come into my house--I have a leafy plant right outside the front door where I deposit them, so they can hide for awhile until they recuperate and rehydrate. I loved this video.
Yes, thanks Algis for an intimate look at a bee in his vulnerablity and Ann for reminding me this very second about these giant ants that have been marching across my apt. to think twice about squashing them.
What a beautiful post and film, Ann! That bee is a natural star. :)

I just read a great book called The Good Food Revolution by Will Allen. Maybe you've heard of him; he is in Wisconsin and recently received a MacArthur fellowship, and he's rebuilding communities with organic farming on small urban spaces. He uses old methods with new innovations, and is able to produce a ton of food in really small spaces...it's so inspiring! He has a really positive vision for how food and communities can be healed. I think you're right, there are lots of people trying to keep that balance on the positive side, thank goodness.
Was so touched by this video, and you put it into even greater context. As another who escorts ants out the door and rescues spiders from stomping shoes, I applaud the humanity of saving these vital, beautiful creatures. We are only as good as how we treat the weakest/smallest among us.
(Wonder how many insect savers there are among Tea Partiers?)
I often resent the meaningfulness of those 50's nostalgic chain emails and bluntly wondered where this was going as I imbibed the anticipated eloquence of your prose, baring with you as a matter of trust, Ann.
And then the display and definition of Alex K's masterful bee!
Please allow the reflection that as boys we constructed an out-scale plastic kit bumble bee with astounding detail inclusive of downy yellow glue-on bee hair. We somehow garnered astute experience. Grateful wonderment as well. Science and its perplexity.
Simply put, nowadays the ubiquity of bedroom games like grand theft auto? Shoot first ask questions later? An 87,000 page tax code bought and paid for?!
How can anything survive?

R
What a beautiful reflection on life, nature and survival. And what an astounding video. Thank you for sharing it with us. r.
Outstanding video from Algis and wonderful words Ann.
Yet he bee flies away to bring hope.
I let flies out the back door. They fly to the light, literally, so if you make that the brightest spot they all head there and then you can just let them out. I carry spiders out, too. Luckily, no ants, so far. Or mice. And I let a bumblebee out at work, and whenever I find a lady bug. Did you want a list?

I never would have thought of the honey, though.
Ann: You might also enjoy a lovely documentary film called "Sister Bee," which had been screened at a number of film festivals, great and small. Google it. I was at its premiere and can tell you it was a wonderful first screening. The music is absolutely superb as well.
And isn't Algis a lovely member of the cast here?
We're so fortunate he's among our number....
R
The video was AMAZING.

Thanks for sharing it and your perspective.
Just the other day a legless bee landed on my doorstep. I spent the day moving him from place to place, but not with my finger...too scared, but using a little plastic cup. I don't know if he got someplace safe. This video, so beautiful, teaches us there is one less things to be frightened of. Thank you.
WOW.....this is incredible.
Absolutely beautiful video.
Creatures big and small.....get caught and need a hand to help them on their way.
Just catching up today - WOW on that video. Surreal even! I am a catch and carry girl - spiders, mice, whatever. I do draw the like at what we refer to in Florida as Palmetto bugs though. Prehistoric cockroaches so big they crunch underfoot ::shiver:: and gigantic colorful grasshoppers 4-5" long that eat my lillies. I'm certain they are a food source somewhere in the world! A brick comes in handy every now and then. I'm saddened by the genetic altering of our food too, Ann, especially things so basic to life - like wheat. I've had to take it out of my life entirely and read many articles indicating it's one of the worst things you can eat now because it is so altered as to be genetically unrecognizable as 'wheat' anymore. I never wanted to live to be 100 anyway, but see such danger for many generations ahead.