Finished taking all the beach-at-sunset pictures we could manage, husband, dog, and I turned and retraced our footprints back toward camp. A huge dark bird hove into sight ahead of us. The eagle soared right over us, its bright head and tail feathers tea-stained by the failing light. A second bird, the same size and silhouette, but lacking the coloring, soared several yards behind it. And that one was trailed by some yards by another adult bird. An eagle family returning to its evening roost, even as we were heading back to ours?
This year, the year I will be marking the passage of my first half-century on the planet, eagles seem to have become my guardian spirits. Normally I could count an entire year’s eagle sightings on one hand, and half of those I would have to go out looking for. But this year….walking the dog through the neighborhood, driving back from town along the Multnomah Channel, strolling on the beach scanning the sky for seabirds, I have encountered the great birds at least a dozen times just in these first few months of 2005. And not so high above my head that I could barely make out their signature coloring against a bright sky. But close by, just skimming the treetops…or sitting on a branch tossing nervous glances over a feathered shoulder as I stood below and gushed, like the hopeless seventies hippie I am, about its beauty and…major coolness.
It appears that the Great Spirit has chosen to send the escort I could not have hoped to ask for, to guide me into the second half of my life. Some naturalists disparage bald eagles as nothing but thieving fish hawks; Benjamin Franklin thought them so lowly that he preferred exalting the turkey over the bald eagle as the national bird. What do they know? I’ll take John Denver’s opinion over theirs any day. Eagles have always meant wildness and freedom and nature’s majesty to me. I will never cease to feel a thrill of discovery, the sense that I have witnessed something rare and untamed, when I spot an eagle wheeling overhead or sitting sentinel on a towering snag. I don’t know what I’ve done, nor what it means, that I have, at least for the moment, such a noble guide. I’m sure it means something. Something beyond my poor, nearsighted dreams. I’m so looking forward to discovering what that may be.
Hi Lisa, I am in total agreement with you on this one....again. I love eagles as you know! Remember the one flying around my house last summer that I wrote about? There is something very spiritual and devine about them and I feel as much as you do.
Absolutely beautiful pictures on this entry, great job!
I would feel the same way. They are such majestic birds and sightings are an "event". I would love to think that such a creature was watching over me...guiding my life. Let your spirit soar with them.
How could anyone not be impressed with these beautiful birds? They are indeed "majorly cool". (If ever there was a word that's indicative of a person's late adolescent time-frame, "cool" is it. I use it constantly. It's just so, well, cool!) I imagine we have eagles around here somewhere but what I see mostly are red-tailed hawks and they never cease to give me a thrill.
I've never actually seen an eagle in the wild, but I feel the same when I see the red-tailed hawks wheeling overhead... I always stop what I'm doing and watch:)
I agree that it is a sign. I will always remember the first time I saw my first eagle in the wild. He was sitting on a fence post when I stopped my car at an intersection of a gravel road and a highway. He just sat there soaking in the fact that I was in such of awe of him. He and his family became regular morning vistors at my parents lake side home and regardless of how often I saw him, he always left me in awe. You're lucky to have an eagle guardian. : ) Candace
I liked your essay today. What a great symbol for your big year. I don't think I have ever seen an eagle. I'm lucky to spot the owl that hoots each night in our woods!
I like to see a man proud of the place in which he lives. I like to see a man live so that his place will be proud of him. --Abraham Lincoln
Where I'm From
I am from station wagons, from kool-aid and turf-builder.
I am from the three bedroom, one bath ticky-tacky box
with the swath of weedy lawn; from lightning bugs,
June bugs, and mosquitoes the size of small birds.
From nights near as hot as the days,
spread-eagled on sticky sheets
crickets creaking, horns honking,
trains rumbling and whistling in the distance…
I am from snow to the eaves, jewel-studded ice storms
and green-black thunderstorms with sideways rain.
I am from bright red tulips, honeysuckle berries,
and worms on the driveway after a cloudburst;
from daisies, tiny wild strawberries, “Queen Anne’s Lace”
and crashing the kite into power lines.
I am from “Look what followed me home from school”
and never having too many animals. From Taffy and Rusty
and Sunny, the yellow headed parakeet, who could say
“Happy Birthday” but only when he thought
no one was listening…
I am from the women who shuttle the carpool,
punch the clock, scrub the toilet,
then climb into the bottle, the herb
or the fantasy to quiet the noise in their heads
and the men they choose to rescue
or who choose to rescue them.
From “When you meet the right one, you’ll just know”
and “Your dad was a virgin when we were married…”
I am from the dutiful eldest daughter who paired off
home made and pro-created at the appointed time,
and the other four who didn’t.
I am from the tearful Catholic and the stoic agnostic;
the rope stretched taut between belief and unbelief,
pulled one direction, then the other…
the eternal tug of war never won.
I’m from pioneers of urban exile; before the country clubs and the soccer and the Rolls Royces.
I’m from the first McDonald’s and the last Tastee Freez.
I am from the great moldering box in the upstairs closet;
roaring twenties sepias stacked on
shiny square instamatic shots, discoloring with age.
I am from the five stair-steps, the Christmas trees, the campfires,
and the blurred mountains captured from a moving car.
I am from the unlikely union of a country boy and a city girl,
brought together by Hitler and Hirohito;
and the neighborhood of compromise
that kept them both sane…almost.
On Where We're Destined to Go...
As for life, I'm humbled, I'm without words sufficient to say
how it has been hard as flint, and soft as a spring pond,both of these and over and over,
and long pale afternoons besides, and so many mysteries beautiful as eggs in a nest, still unhatched though warm and watched over by something I have never seen -a tree angel, perhaps,or a ghost of holiness.
Every day I walk out into the world to be dazzled, then to be reflective. It suffices, it is all comfort - along with human love,
dog love, water love, little-serpent love,sunburst love, or love for that smallest of birds flying among the scarlet flowers.
There is hardly time to think about
stopping, and lying down at last to the long afterlife, to the tenderness yet to come, when time will brim over the singular pond, and become forever,
and we will pretend to melt away into the leaves.
As for death, I can't wait to be the hummingbird, can you?
Mary Oliver
"Sometimes I go around feeling sorry for myself; and all the while I am being carried by the wind across the sky." --Chippewa saying.
Hi Lisa,
ReplyDeleteI am in total agreement with you on this one....again. I love eagles as you know! Remember the one flying around my house last summer that I wrote about? There is something very spiritual and devine about them and I feel as much as you do.
Absolutely beautiful pictures on this entry, great job!
Gayla
Lisa, how exciting to have so many eagles cross your path, and I think you're right that it's a sign and a guide to new things.
ReplyDeleteI would feel the same way. They are such majestic birds and sightings are an "event". I would love to think that such a creature was watching over me...guiding my life. Let your spirit soar with them.
ReplyDeleteThis is a beautiful entry. And what a powerful escort into the second half (I'm assuming a VERY long life for you).
ReplyDeleteHow could anyone not be impressed with these beautiful birds? They are indeed "majorly cool". (If ever there was a word that's indicative of a person's late adolescent time-frame, "cool" is it. I use it constantly. It's just so, well, cool!) I imagine we have eagles around here somewhere but what I see mostly are red-tailed hawks and they never cease to give me a thrill.
ReplyDeleteI've never actually seen an eagle in the wild, but I feel the same when I see the red-tailed hawks wheeling overhead... I always stop what I'm doing and watch:)
ReplyDeleteThe eagle near the tree is mind blowing shot. Beautiful.
ReplyDeleteJackie
I agree that it is a sign. I will always remember the first time I saw my first eagle in the wild. He was sitting on a fence post when I stopped my car at an intersection of a gravel road and a highway. He just sat there soaking in the fact that I was in such of awe of him. He and his family became regular morning vistors at my parents lake side home and regardless of how often I saw him, he always left me in awe. You're lucky to have an eagle guardian. : )
ReplyDeleteCandace
what an adventure you have ahead of you!
ReplyDeleteMarti
I liked your essay today. What a great symbol for your big year. I don't think I have ever seen an eagle. I'm lucky to spot the owl that hoots each night in our woods!
ReplyDeleteHope you have a great year.
ReplyDeleteI'll bet you're going to love your 50's!
ReplyDelete*** Coy ***