If you can’t make it better, you can laugh at it.
Erma Bombeck
Thursday Morning
On Thursday, Anxiety had been my unwelcome houseguest for a
couple of weeks. Its cause, related to
my thyroid, had been discovered, and the battle had been engaged. However, like
Dorothy in the forest of Oz, I knew it was going to get darker before it got
lighter.
As I left my house in the morning to go to work, my senses
were on high alert. I was aware of my breathing, my footsteps, the sunshine and
probably every bird in every tree around me. The white pick up truck jumped out
at me. It wasn’t a regular in the neighborhood, and it was parked oddly. Two
men stood outside of it, smoking furiously and staring up my block. Staring at
me? No, no. Knock it off anxiety.
As I opened the door of my car and got in, the two men flung
their cigarettes to the ground in unison. As I started driving toward them,
they both turned to face the truck. Wait; are they trying to hide their faces?
As I passed by them, I watched in my rear view mirror as they got into the
truck, started it up, and after letting one car in between, began driving the
same direction as me.
Are they following me? I kept one eye on them as I continued
my drive, and sure enough, they matched me, turn for turn. By now, anxiety had
the full complement of fight or flight coping mechanisms turned on. Sweating –
check. Heart pounding – check. Overwhelming fear – check. Then, after
“following” me for what seemed like a really long time (but really a matter of
minutes) they turned into the shopping center where there is a drive up coffee
shop. Cigarettes and coffee. For some, a
regular breakfast.
It took me the rest of my commute to deep-breathe myself
into a semblance of calm. The intellectual part of my brain cajoled the out of
control emotional side of my brain into accepting that, yes, the white truck
and the two smoking men were something out of the ordinary on my street. They
truly had appeared to be waiting for someone or something and had driven in the
same direction as me. But that was all. Call off the dogs, anxiety.
Saturday Night
On Saturday, Anxiety was proving difficult to dislodge. I
was upping my game with exercise, chamomile tea and crochet. Still, I was
having a hard time, and friends offered me dinner and a movie at their house. I
knew they were basically offering to babysit me, and I accepted their generosity. Dinner was lovely, the movie was
great, and soon I was ready to head home and try to get some sleep. I got in my
car, and drove the two blocks home.
As I pulled into the driveway, I noticed my motion sensor
light at the front door was on. This happened a lot with neighborhood cats
taking shortcuts through my shrubs and across my steps. As I turned to open my
door and get out of my car, I saw the real reason that the light was on. There,
on my front window ledge, was a large rooster, and it looked like it was dead.
Its body was folded up and its head and tail feathers were hanging over the side
of the ledge.
Anxiety came to life immediately. Who would put a dead
rooster on the window ledge right next to my front door? Why would someone put
a dead rooster on the window ledge right next to my door? What does it mean
when someone leaves you a dead rooster?
The men with the white truck flashed through my mind. It all
made sense. They HAD been staring at me, they HAD been following me. And now,
tonight, they had returned while I wasn’t home to leave me this frightening and
cryptic message. I slammed the car door shut and raced back to my friends’
house, cell phone photo in hand to show them.
The rooster sure looked dead to them, too. Feeling foolish,
but frightened, we called the non-emergency police number and tried to describe
what was lurking at my house. They said they would dispatch an officer. So, my
friend and I headed back to my house.
The officer wasn’t sure why he was there. Probably he
thought he hadn’t heard right. Maybe they had told him “see the lady about a
rooster.” He got out of his car and we both approached my front door. He
couldn’t see the window until we were up close because of some shrubs in front
of the house. Then, as we came around the shrubs, he shone his flashlight on
the window ledge. He seemed very surprised to see a dead rooster. “How did that
get here?” he asked. How indeed.
Then, the rooster that had been laying there with head and
tail hanging down and body all folded up like a corpse, moved. Not a lot. But
move it did. Oh, maybe it is hurt, we all surmised. And somehow, in its hurt
state, it had managed to find its way to my window. My window in the middle of
town. The officer said he would call animal control to come get it. He said he
would keep an eye on it as I opened my door and got into my house. And just as
I got inside the door, he shouted, “Wow, I’ve never seen them fly!”
Apparently, having enough of us, or feeling a whole lot
better, the rooster had jumped to its feet, spread surprisingly large wings and
flew off down the street and out of sight. I offered the officer my photo for
his report if he thought no one would believe him, but I knew that police see a
lot of strange things working the late shift. A resurrected rooster was
probably a regular thing for all I knew.
Even anxiety couldn’t hold together the men in the white
truck stalking me so they could leave a dead rooster on my window story. The
sheer absurdity of the idea put enough power into my laughter to deflate
anxiety to a little whimpering annoyance. And sleep
came a little easier that night.