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Waking two hours before dawn, my young grandson and I, The old stagecoach Inn was dark and silent, squeak of floorboards underfoot the only discernible sounds. A crowd of deer bounded away off the green front lawn as we sleepily made our way to the truck. A bright yellow full moon was on descending ebb, in a star clustered sky, allowing just enough light, to light our way by. The high desert two lane road was fully deserted, only our headlights pierced the darkness. Within seconds they began to appear, darting from both sides of the narrow road, as if on a mission, hypnotically attracted to our headlights I assume.  At 60 miles an hour almost impossible to miss. But, god knows I tried. "Thump, Bump!" "Thump, bump!" Another bunny under my wheels, swerving not really mattering, miss one hit two others. Jackrabbits and cottontails, as if Kamikaze inspired, eight or ten at a time from both sides of the road darted headlong trying to cross. Fast as they were some did not make it. We stopped counting the carnage near 100 hits, no way to tally the many we missed.  No joy in keeping score of the newly departed. By the time we reached the Alvord Desert, the ride transformed into a 25 mile surrealistic trip. Who could have known there could be so many? Blood on my tires and my soul, I did not intend. Out on the vast dry white, hard caked, once long ago lake bed, now desert, we sat watching the new day's sun rising up from behind the distant eastern mountains. This quiet inspiring moment having been our goal of intention. All the while, I was distracted from the magnificent scene before us, as I kept seeing and hearing the repeated echoes of; "Thump, Bump! Thump, Bump! Oh no, not another!" In my guilt ridden brain.   Why they do it I can not say, compelled perhaps, like moths to a flame.
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Apr 26, 2017
Apr 26, 2017 at 2:28 PM UTC
The price of a Sunrise
Waking two hours before dawn, my young grandson and I, The old stagecoach Inn was dark and silent, squeak of floorboards underfoot the only discernible sounds. A crowd of deer bounded away off the green front lawn as we sleepily made our way to the truck. A bright yellow full moon was on descending ebb, in a star clustered sky, allowing just enough light, to light our way by. The high desert two lane road was fully deserted, only our headlights pierced the darkness. Within seconds they began to appear, darting from both sides of the narrow road, as if on a mission, hypnotically attracted to our headlights I assume.  At 60 miles an hour almost impossible to miss. But, god knows I tried. "Thump, Bump!" "Thump, bump!" Another bunny under my wheels, swerving not really mattering, miss one hit two others. Jackrabbits and cottontails, as if Kamikaze inspired, eight or ten at a time from both sides of the road darted headlong trying to cross. Fast as they were some did not make it. We stopped counting the carnage near 100 hits, no way to tally the many we missed.  No joy in keeping score of the newly departed. By the time we reached the Alvord Desert, the ride transformed into a 25 mile surrealistic trip. Who could have known there could be so many? Blood on my tires and my soul, I did not intend. Out on the vast dry white, hard caked, once long ago lake bed, now desert, we sat watching the new day's sun rising up from behind the distant eastern mountains. This quiet inspiring moment having been our goal of intention. All the while, I was distracted from the magnificent scene before us, as I kept seeing and hearing the repeated echoes of; "Thump, Bump! Thump, Bump! Oh no, not another!" In my guilt ridden brain.   Why they do it I can not say, compelled perhaps, like moths to a flame.
Beyond the experienced magnificents of our surroundings and the sunrise that day, my grandson received a lesson in empathy and compassion that will no doubt last forever, to revere the life of all living things.
Written by
M/American
Apr 26, 2017
Apr 26, 2017 at 2:28 PM UTC
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