Sunday, November 30, 2014

Lessons from Archie and Chicken


An unknown rooster showed up in my brother’s barnyard last winter.  “Chicken” as he is now called, is a good-looking bird with a yellow neck, flowing dark green tail, and a handsome red comb.  Knowing his beauty, Chicken struts through the yard, helps himself to the cat’s food, enters any door he finds open, and even goes so far as to attack the cattle. 

There are two beings that Chicken respects.  One is my brother who somehow managed to impress upon Chicken’s limited intelligence that his welcome lasts only as long as he follows certain guidelines. The other being is, of course, the one-year-old Australian shepherd, Archie. 

Archie dearly loves to run, and the only thing better than running is chasing.  Thus Chicken is a fascinating specimen to this focused pup merely because he runs.  As Archie’s legs grew and his pace quickened this game became unfair. There is now a steadfast rule, don’t chase Chicken.

After milking chores on Thanksgiving morning we could not find Archie anywhere.   We called and whistled to no avail.  This was misdemeanor number one.  Eventually we found him. He had caught Chicken and was systematically plucking him.  Of course, chasing Chicken at all was misdemeanor number two, and catching Chicken, was misdemeanor number three.  Archie got to spend the day corralled in his kennel with water and a blanket.  A whole day of “time-out” all because of a few minutes of very focused stolen pleasure.

Here are two things I learned:

1. It is dangerous to become too focused on one outcome.  With such blinders on we lose track of what is going on around us.  We can’t see potential consequences.  We can’t even see potential opportunity.  When you feel yourself honing into one specific position or opinion think of Archie, deaf and blind to all but what he’s chasing.  Then take a step back.  Don’t give up your values or discredit your own opinions.  Just hold them a little more lightly. 

2. Unhealthy behavior begets unhealthy behavior.  The morning of this story Chicken’s tail had finally regrown from a different Archie encounter.  He felt spunky enough to think about challenging me.  Archie can resist a chicken that stays out of his way and modestly sits on the roost until daylight.  But a crowing rooster who saucily struts around challenging the world to a fight will most likely find more than he bargained for in this energetic pup.  If you’re unhappy with someone else’s behavior kindly take notice of your own before calling them to task for it!

It’s just simple story and even as I write it I wonder how such an effort can even touch the storm of violence in our world. Perhaps it can’t, but I write in the hope that others are also looking for metaphors in their own contexts that help them grow in self-awareness and in kindness.