I was sitting at a picnic table in Ravenswood Manor Park, writing in my journal. I was concentrating very hard, yet I felt my wrist glide left to right easily as the words flowed from my pen.
Then – splat!
Plummeting down maybe five inches from my head, I saw bird droppings plop down then spread out across a two inch area of the table surface like a two dimensional version of a mushroom shaped cloud.
What the –
I examined the spot, the whitish splatter on the grayish brown table surface. I looked around to see if anyone was watching me, or to see if anyone had been hit. All I could think was, That was a close call!
I don’t want to get overly dramatic, but when I thought about the possibility of conditioning my hair with bird pooh, I was very relieved I missed the experience.
I often contemplate my good fortune at small events that work out well for me like catching a bus that only comes every twenty minutes or winning a free concert ticket by calling in to a radio station quiz, or finding out that my reserved theater seat is behind a very short person.
I don’t always think about close calls as good fortune, times when I narrowly miss a problematic situation. But these close calls are blessings.
- Like when you get back to your car after an errand and are not greeted by a ticket on your windshield even though your paid time expired 11 minutes ago;
- Or when you’re in the middle of baking something and think you’re missing an essential ingredient only to scan your memory and realize you have a spare box (of cocoa or walnuts or whatever) in your pantry;
- Or when your piece of toast seems to fly off your plate and land on your linoleum, buttered side up;
- Or when you break a glass and, uncharacteristically, actually have shoes on;
- Or when you find your bike standing upright in a public rack after you realize you didn’t slip the chain through the spokes properly;
- Or when you drink milk after the expiration date and don’t spend the night hugging the porcelain god;
- Or when you read the small print on an airline ticket because you have to re-arrange your itinerary and realize you actually can exchange the ticket without a heinous penalty;
- Or when you close the back door of your home, returning after a day out, seconds before it starts to rain.
You may laugh that your good fortune is a sign of living well or of good karma. Inwardly, you still think, Whew. Close call. Boy, am I lucky!
I have tried not to base feelings of gratitude on comparisons, on thinking myself fortunate compared to a child laborer in Sri Lanka and things like that. I would rather cultivate gratitude without getting tangled in relativity.
But I have to admit that feeling fortunate can often come in the form of contemplating averting a minor disaster.
Keeping your head out of the way of a bird bomb is no small thing.
Bird doo do! My mother actually thought that to get bird poop on your head or on the laundry line was Good Luck! Reasoning was “How often does that happen?” About 2 weeks ago my bed sheets got hit by the bird doo; first time it has ever happened to me, and I hang laundry outside at least 6 months out of the year. Laura Lee
I had to look for it, but this is one of my favorite posts and is my submission towards your request for feedback on favorite posts.