Saturday, July 16, 2005

Bee

Throughout the first half of July 2005, I had a few seemingly unrelated experiences that seemed to warrant documentation. Take these for what they are worth. I’m not 100% sure I know where I’m going with this, but I think I like it (all of these are true).

Situation #1 – It was a Tuesday morning and I had just gotten on the employee shuttle bus at Geisinger. A few ladies (whom I didn’t know) got on the bus with me and we all sat in our own seats. I sat near the front, perhaps three seats in, on the right side. Two of the ladies sat on the left side, while one lady sat in front of me.

It was a warm day, and some of the windows were open. As we pulled away from the first bus stop, we all noticed that a yellow jacket had flown onboard. It wasn’t really bothering anyone, and seemed like it just wanted to find a way out. It flew past the folks on the left side, and then made a couple rounds to the right side. As it did this, the women were intent on shooing it away or (if necessary) killing it. There was a palatable sense of fear and distrust of this bee.

As the bee flew to my side of the bus, I was glad to see it land on the unopened window next to me. I began to open the window with the bee clearly in my sights, hoping it would get the picture and just fly away. As I did this, the women on the bus looked at me like I had three heads and made some remarks under their breath. Knowing this, I explained that I wasn’t trying to kill it, I was just trying to let it go. One of the ladies remarked that if it came by her it wasn’t going to get such a treatment.

I did not explain the reasons for my action – that harming sentient beings is forbidden by Buddhist doctrine (regardless of which branch you study). I knew that would make no difference to them.

The bee eventually flew out the window before we reached the second bus stop, and all concerned gave a sigh of relief. I filed this experience away for several weeks as I formulated what it meant to me, and what it reflected about human nature.

I suppose if I wanted to I could make a sexist remark about these women – about their fear and lack of courage in such a situation. Quite frankly, I do not believe that, and just prefer not to go down that road. There’s no point to interjecting machismo into my own actions in this case. However, I think their behavior was telling on several levels. Perhaps it is the mother instinct – the instinct to protect, that drove these women to their mumbled comments and strange glances. Perhaps it is societal – not genetic – that some people react in these ways. And perhaps it is because of the general media construction of insects, reptiles and other creatures that scares people away from being compassionate toward such beings. Or maybe the women were all nurses, and all knew something medically about the bee that made their concern warranted.

In any case, I did not address it with them and preferred to just think on it by myself, and through this journal entry. For the reader I pose these questions:

What would you have done?
What does their action say about our tendency to violence?
How does a motherly instinct function in this case?
What else can be learned from such a simple occurrence?

Let me just add that I don’t necessarily feel that I am better than these women. I do feel that I did the right thing, but the experience has left me with a quandary regarding my perception of nurses/medical staff and their capacity for compassion, which in this case seems to have been suppressed.

4 Comments:

At 12:08 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

please feel relieved to know that all women are not bee-haters:Some of us do love honey!and have a healthy respect for life forms of all kinds. Perhaps nurses are jaded because of instances where a bee sting caused an allergic reaction.Any way if its any comfort to you I think their behavior was wierd, not yours.

 
At 12:06 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

If I felt threatened by the insect, I'd kill it (if it had tasty honey, I'd expliot it!).
I don't mind killing sentient
"beings" unless they're cute and cuddly. That said, I probably wouldn't pee on a cat if it were on fire (Dogs I'd pee on; I'd even use a fire blanket or water).

What Would Jesus Bomb?
T-Shirt seen in "Six Feet Under"

 
At 10:44 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I often notice that I am the one who sees no need to kill a bee while other people are going out of their way to kill it. It doesn't make sense to me even if these people are acutely aware of dangers of bee stings or allergic to bee stings themselves, because the way to avoid a bee sting is to let the bee out of hte window, not to go out of your way to kill it. Bees don't LOVE to sting people, I think, in fact they really don't want to. it is a last resort of defense to sting a huge creature like a human (like if they get stepped on). I have avoided bee stings most of my life while never going out of my way to kill bees (except as a child when I stepped on them and they stung me). I try to let them out of the window and stay calm. no paniced shooing away, no screaming. I let bees land on my arm and they don't sting me. they don't WANT to sting people. they just want to get their pollen and get back to the hive.
and all that shooing and screaming and hitting will make the bee sting someone. silly silly. stupid stupid really.
I am a scientist and a studier of nature so I am unusual, but still I don't understand the desire to kill a bee (or a snake) before it does anything threatening. It is more afraid of us than we are of it, for hte most part.
I think that people are tught an unreasonable fear of insects and snakes at an early age and it is a shame.
all of that said, if the bee were going to sting me, I would hvae no problem killing it. I kill mosquitoes because they do sting (and they don't make honey), and I kill roaches and mice because I will not have them in my house and I am king of the jungle. but I am not a stupid king. (queen actually).
bleamond@aol.com

 
At 10:56 AM, Blogger John said...

Last summer, I was walking down the sidewalk in front of my apartment building when a bee, for no apparent reason, crawled down the back of my shirt and bit me. I wasn't doing anything to provoke it, it just bit me.

It scared the crap out of me. I'm allergic to just about everything, and I've never been stung before, so I prepared for the worst. Aimee and I ran into our apartment, and she was able to remove the stinger. Luckily, I didn't have a reaction, but I'm less inclined to let a bee survive when it's around me.

That said, I hate killing anything. While not a Buddhist by any measure, I do agree with their no-kill philosophy to an extent. I hate killing bugs in our house. We get a lot of Box Elder beetles in Iowa, and they get in the house often. When they do, I put them outside. Same with ladybugs. Back at our house in PA, when we developed a mouse problem, we tried no-kill traps before relenting and calling an exterminator. I know it was the right thing to do - mice carry diseases - it still makes me sad to think what the mice went through when they ate the poison.

My philosopy on killing sentient beings is this - if it threatens me, I will kill it. If not, I will do my best to let it live.

On a related note, I read somewhere (or saw it on the Discovery Channel, I'm not sure) that the fear of insects and snakes is an inherited fear. Through evolution, it makes sense that those with a fear of snakes and insects lived more often than those that didn't - snakes and insects are sometimes deadly.

 

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