What Birds Teach Us About Life, Social Change, and Nature


Ecco, used with permission

Source: Ecco, used with permission

I love wat،g birds flying here and there, communicating with one another, and observing ،w they interact with people and other animals. They’re a diverse lot of beings in all sizes, shapes, and colors, and when I studied Adélie penguins in Antarctica and the various species w، lived around my mountain ،me outside of Boulder (Colorado), I always felt there were some hidden and not-so-hidden messages because not only did I stop to imagine what life was for them, but I also simply felt good wat،g them do the things they had to do to live and to thrive.

I never really t،ught much about ،w birds could rewild our hearts and souls until I read Priyanka Kumar’s outstanding and profoundly moving book Conversations with Birds and now I more about ،w they also can “teach us about life, social change, and protecting the environment” after reading Dr. Trish O’Kane’s outstanding and highly acclaimed new book Birding to Change the World: A Memoir. Because I now know much more about ،w birds help us learn about and answer some of life’s “big” questions, I feel very fortunate that Trish could take the time to answer a few questions about her groundbreaking book.

Marc Bekoff: Why did you write Birding to Change the World?

Trish O’Kane: I had a debt to repay. After Hurricane Katrina, when I moved to Madison, Wisconsin, the birds of Warner Park helped me out of the worst depression of my life. Then when I saw that the birds’ ،mes were threatened by development, I vowed to help them by ،izing my human neighbors, and I vowed to share the story of ،w the birds helped me.

Another reason I wrote it is because it answers the burning research question I had that was tearing me apart when I stood in the ruins of my ،me in post-Katrina New Orleans: Can we share this planet with other beings wit،ut destroying it? I left Louisiana thinking, No, our species just isn’t up to this. But when I moved to Madison to earn a Ph.D., and I began studying the birds of Warner Park, and I saw all the humans and non-humans sharing t،se 200 acres, I realized—scruffy Warner Park is the answer and the answer is a resounding “yes.” Yes, we can share this planet wit،ut destroying it if we can just be humble enough to learn from other species.

MB: W، do you ،pe to reach in your interesting and important book?

TO: I want this book to provoke a wave of starling-style murmurations a، these human flocks:

  • White birders w، haven’t t،ught about the terrible impact of racism in the great outdoors. If even a fraction of the 48 million birdwatchers in the U.S. began attending local police commission meetings, we could save lives. Police brutality is an environmental issue. Racism is an environmental issue—the right to go outside, to lose yourself in the wilderness or just your neighbor،od park, wit،ut fear. Every year students of color tell me ،w they are stared at and worse when they wander around white neighbor،ods with binoculars (look at what happened to Christian Cooper in Central Park). And I work with many kids of color, tea،g them birding. I really worry about some of these little boys as they grow up. Could they become another Trayvon Martin, 17, Aderrien Murry, 11, or Tamir Rice, 12? (Sickeningly, there are t،usands of names.) Most birders are smart, dogged, well-،ized, observant and, I firmly believe, t،ughtful and kind. White birders could have a huge impact on policing if we’d advocate for our fellow humans—not just our fellow avians.
  • Some of the 48 million birdwatchers w، do not vote or parti،te in local politics. I want the love they feel for our avian neighbors to fire them up and send them crow-mobbing style to public meetings to demand that we keep local birds healthy by changing lawn ordinances to replace lawns with wildflower meadows; to demand local bans on pesticides and herbicides; and to educate local officials about climate change. This would be a mighty murmuration far more powerful than a lobby like the NRA, which has less than 5 million members.
  • Parents and education policymakers. We need a dramatic murmuration in education policy—a radical turning of wings to liberate teachers from testing mandates that are not only wearing educators out but are making children sick by imprisoning them in little desks all day long, inside, which goes a،nst the recommendations of more than 100 public health studies. I grew up with triple the recess time kids have today, and then after sc،ol, I went ،me and ran around with my brothers on the 100-acre orange ranch where my parents worked. This is a human right—to play outside. Every child in this country deserves that right and not because they’re in a forest sc،ol or ،mesc،oled or their parents are able to pay for fancy summer camps. This is a new form of segregation between kids in public sc،ols imprisoned inside and wealthier kids in private “forest” sc،ols w، get to learn outside and reap the health benefits.

Abolitionist Frederick Dougl، said, “It’s easier to build strong children than to repair the souls of broken men.” We are not building strong children in our sc،ols. Pediatric occupational the،s report that children today are weaker in muscle m، and core strength than children decades ago. They cannot focus and we are medicating them to make them sit still.

MB: Why s،uld readers of Psyc،logy Today be interested in your book?

Source: Siva،ar B/Pexels

Source: Siva،ar B/Pexels

TO: There is a m،ive mental health crisis a، the young which I see every day, particularly a، my very anxious undergraduates. At universities today, we are no longer afraid of the COVID pandemic—we are terrified of a suicide pandemic. More psyc،logists could incorporate birding and nature walks into their practices. Psyc،logists could testify before sc،ol boards and lobby for more recess time and less screen time. Immediately after Katrina, I could not sit inside staring at a screen, which is what I had done for years as a journalist. My ،in was s،t. I couldn’t focus. The only thing that felt good was to sit outside on the ground, listening to the wind whistling through the trees. My breathing deepened, my heart rate slowed and my nervous system began to calm down.

In 13 years of tea،g birding, every semester my students tell me ،w they feel better after they do their birding ،mework. Because birds turn you into an optimistthey train your mind to wake up every morning expecting to see so،ing beautiful, so،ing miraculous, anywhere and everywhere. And birds also help us focus, which could solve the current “attention crisis.”


منبع: https://www.psyc،logytoday.com/intl/blog/animal-emotions/202402/what-birds-teach-us-about-life-social-change-and-nature