Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
At some point, the ocean rolls in and out of many of my tales like a slightly demented uncle who lives upstairs who you only see occasionally, but since my last autobiographical piece was about tropical crime and punishment, I thought I’d continue the theme of crime and talk about home invasion on land. I live in a kind of isolated location, with some houses on one side of our property and none on the other side, just redwood forest. And thirty years ago, it was somewhat wilder.
Before the kid was born, my wife and I used to keep a loaded shotgun by the side of our bed up in the sleeping loft. Never a shell in the chamber, of course, it was just for protection.
Figure 1. The Beagle Boys, canine career criminals, prepared for a break-in.
I only ever picked that gun up in self-defense one time. For some reason I was alone that night, my gorgeous ex-fiancee was off somewhere. There was moonlight, but the redwoods are thick, so it was patchy. The house was quiet. I went to bed and read for a while, then turned off the light and was drifting off.
Morpheus the God of Sleep and I were just exchanging business cards, his was made of black onyx with black lettering, when a soft rapping on the door made me sit straight up. “Hello?” I shouted. “Who’s there?”
There was no answer. I listened for a while. Nothing. I figured I’d heard branches on the roof or something. I settled back in bed, and started sliding downhill, when the rapping started up again, more insistent than before. “Who’s there?”, I yelled. No answer. Again silence.
So I grabbed the shotgun from the side of the bed there in the sleeping loft, and I went creeping down the stairs, “naked as a jaybird” as my beloved grandma used to say. I grabbed the flashlight from where it was stored. I noticed that my hands were unsteady. The pounding had stopped completely. I had no clue what was happening. I imagined and rejected a host of possibilities. The silence continued. I jacked a shell into the chamber of the shotgun. The snick-snick of the action was flat, foreboding, metallic. I waited. And waited. Finally, the pounding came again.
I flung open the front door and shined the flashlight out through the door from inside the house. “Come out right now!”, I shouted, “Don’t mess with me, I’ve got a gun!”.
Silence. Nothing. Well, not nothing. The cold night wind blew in on my privates, I was freezing. But other than the wind, silence.
Silence. I thought about stepping outside. Silence. I thought about my privates. Silence. “Perhaps I should reconsider my options”, I thought, and I closed the door against the cold wind, and reconsidered my options. And my explanations for the pounding. I didn’t see that I had too many of either, unless hiding in my house with a shotgun counted as an option, and for me that didn’t cut it … the silence dragged on. I decided the next time, if there was a next time, I was gonna make my move, yes sirree, that’s what I’d do.
Suddenly, the pounding started again, and this time it was more urgent yet, slamming and thumping. I gritted my teeth, flung open the door and jumped through to the landing outside, my heart knocking against my ribs. I looked ahead. Nothing. I turned the beam of my flashlight and the barrel of my shotgun to the right. Nothing. I spun around to the left, shotgun and flashlight moving as one. Nothing.
Nothing?
Nothing? How could there be nothing? I looked wildly around, to the front, to the right, to the left, up, around, nothing, what had been pounding on my door scant seconds before? My mind leapt to the wildest possibilities …
It was only when I looked down near my feet, just to the left of the door, that I finally saw the two opossums. I hadn’t noticed them because they were both “playing possum”, unmoving, pretending to be dead as opossums do when startled … but unless opossum passion is a big feature of the opossum afterlife, the intertwined nature and disposition of their “corpses” left little doubt that they had been rudely and cruelly interrupted at what was clearly a critical time for the survival of the opossum species.
Now, there have been occasions when I have felt extremely foolish in my life. No one goes a lifetime without committing some monumental blunders, and I am assuredly no exception.
But this one was bizarrely crazy, because to my astonishment, I found that I felt exactly like in those dreams that I sometimes used to have as a kid. You might have had them too, the dream where you are involved in some kind of everyday public activity, maybe speaking to a crowd, when suddenly you look down and you realize to your extreme embarrassment that you forgot to put your pants or your dress on, and you are completely nude, and everyone is looking at you, and they start pointing and laughing, and you are completely humiliated and ashamed? You know that dream?
That’s exactly how I felt. I felt totally embarrassed and ashamed that the possums could see me naked, even though those opossums looked like some stuffed museum exhibit demonstrating the simplified explanation of opossum sex for the kids. And it was like the dream most especially because even though their beady little opossum eyes were closed tight, I could feel those little buggers looking at me anyways, they have their sneaky ways. They were neither dead nor sleeping, they were vibrantly awake, with all senses cranked out to the limit. They knew exactly where I was, they would know if I stepped towards or away from them. Eyes closed or not, they were wired to me, they could see my every move, and I was embarrassed that they could see my nakedness. I could hear the silent cackling of their demented interior opossum laughter, I could tell they were pointing at my exposed manhood and snickering. I melted under their unseen censure, just as in the dream.
And that all went through my head in an instant, and I was frozen in shock, just as happens in dreams sometimes, where you want to run and your feet are stuck, or you want to scream but your tongue is glued to the roof of your mouth and you can’t catch your breath, and I wanted to move, and I didn’t want to disturb them, and I wanted to melt through the porch in total embarrassment, and I wanted to scream and run, I couldn’t think, the gears were jammed, the lines were crossed, all the fuses were blown …
I stood frozen.
The cold wind was more insistent, I could see it twitching and pulling at the hairs on the possums, and it was definitely freezing my whatchamacallit because just like in the dream, I was I was indeed completely nude.
And to my amazement I found myself mumbling incoherent apologies to the opossums, about how I didn’t know it was them, babbling that I was sorry about scaring them with the shotgun, the wind blowing over my shoulders and through my legs, a nagging, insistent wind that was stripping the heat from my body. I remember saying I hoped they wouldn’t hold it against me but I’d understand if they did, wild words, meaningless incantations of apology. Finally, the spell broke and I realized the madness was upon me, and I could move again. I snapped off the flashlight without another sound and ran back inside and closed the door and thrust the shotgun into the corner by the stove still loaded, still one in the chamber, and fled back up the stairs to my bed and dived under the covers, shivering.
And there, for the next while, I tried really really hard not to think about the colossally, stupendously embarrassing mental image, the picture in my mind that a pint of eyebleach hardly touched, the “god’s-eye-view” from above and to the side of a stark naked fully grown idiot with a loaded shotgun in his hand, shell in the chamber and finger on the trigger, shivering outdoors in the moonlight at midnight with a frigid wind blowing on his unmentionables, and babbling profuse apologies to a couple of unmoving opossums frozen solid right in the hottest, sweetest, and least optimal instant of maximal opassion.
…
After I lay there a while trying to convince the mental eraser to function just this once, the pounding started up again, and it got louder and louder. I decided the part I had said about them holding it against me, that was anthropomorphism—they couldn’t care less. Heck, I might have just upped their passion levels, danger does that. Ask any adrenaline junkie like myself, we’ll tell you. I went to sleep contented, knowing the ospecies was going to survive.
And as you can tell from this story … the eyebleach never did work.
w.
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Then there is the football team from my alma mater.
We wanted to change the mascot to the possums because they got killed at home and played dead on the road.
My wife and I woke in the middle of the night to sudden very loud knocking on the window right next to the bed. Heart racing I swept aside the curtain to look out and confronted … a face looking back at me about 1 foot from the window. Absolutely scared the living crap out of me. I was wearing about what Willis was wearing when he confronted the possums but that was the least of my concerns. However the guy then immediately got down on the ground and bowed to me … as in forehead on the dirt bowed. Told him to stay put and tossed on a dressing gown and went out to find what on earth was going on. Turned out to be a Korean dude from down the road so drunk that he was barely able to walk, unable to find his own house in the dark, lost and in danger of freezing to death. He was able to remember his house number though. So I hauled him to his feet and walked him home with him leaning on my shoulder the whole way. Knocked on his door and an appalled looking woman opened up and quickly hustled him inside.
By coincidence I met him and his wife again at a social function about a week later. Lovely people. By unspoken mutual agreement however we all pretended that we’d never seen each other before. Mind you he was so drunk at the time I doubt he could remember me. I’m pretty sure she did though.
well…since you’re more likely to die from cold
http://www.economist.com/blogs/graphicdetail/2013/02/daily-chart-7?fsrc=scn/tw/te/dc/dangerofdeath
The comments about anecdotes of humanity not belonging in a “science” blog, are really just juvenile. All science is, is our collected current “wisdom” viewed through the lens of our “modern” existence. It will be different tomorrow, as it was different yesterday.. In the cosmic scheme of things, the only things we get to carry us through life are our experiences, regardless whether they have the stamp of ritual methodology, or the enrichment of memory and language. Hey, if your mind is open enough to possibilities, it’s maybe all a figment of sombebody’s imagination… 🙂
Tallking about possums reminds me of an old biologist’s joke: Why did the chicken cross the road?
To show the possums it could be done…
Thanks, Willis for the tales, it brings up old dead memories from my own existence, to relish and retell anew.
Nasty hissing things! And there is no chasing them away. They won’t run! I had one park it’s slow self on my front porch for a week and would hiss at me every time I walked outside. During the week I live in town so I just had to live with it else I would have done it in. Fortunately it tired of hissing at me and left for some other greener pasture.
Latitude says: February 16, 2013 at 6:48 am “well…since you’re more likely to die from cold”
So, what does {selected circumstance}/1 mean? I suspect chart junk.
I see that “Assault by firearm” is worth “24,974/1” while “Firearms discharge” is worth “514,147/1” on a chart of “Danger of death”. An assault by firearm not discharging doesn’t usually cause death. Indeed, legally, assault is unwanted contact short of physical, unwanted touching is battery. Chart junk.
I see “Cycling” is worth “340,845/1” and my mind is boggled, having exceptional bicycling miles, more than 50K miles when I stopped counting them up.
In my career in Navy Nuclear Power, the fundamental unit of acceptable risk is that accepted in ordinary daily life. Many of these ‘selected circumstances’ are encountered without a second thought.
Chart junk for the credulous.
Rhys Jaggar, you are history-ignorant. No other warring nation/empire has ever made more effort to minimize civilian casualties than the US, at least since WWII. Tragic, but the Iraqi casualties are almost all by their own hands.
Goodness Rhys! I suggest a warm glass of milk and a tummy rub! You’ll feel better in no time! Your own country has quite the Empire history. In fact we all have our dirty underwear. So if I were you, I wouldn’t be pointing that finger. You just pointed it in a mirror.
Having once had occasion to realize that armed-and-pantsless puts a severe crimp in one’s range of possibly needed options, I now keep a pair of shorts near the bed with a non-empty holster on the belt, along with a flashlight and pepper spray.
Paul Coppin says:
February 16, 2013 at 7:08 am
Talking about possums reminds me of an old biologist’s joke: Why did the chicken cross the road?
To show the possums it could be done…
Why did the chicken cross the road?
For some fowl reason.
“Science done in the dark by a few learned boffins is already dead in the 21st century, the practitioners just didn’t notice when they ran past their use-by dates…”
Thomas S. Kuhn observed in his The Structure of Scientific Revolutins that progress is not usually achieved by established researchers in a line of inquiry. The established boffins, as Willis likes to call them, are busily defending the paradigm they grew up with and learned to love — even though it doesn’t do all that great a job of explaining whatever phenomenon is being studied. It is the outsiders, newly arrived with a fresh perspective that make the real progress and open up new insights.
Ian H
February 16, 2013 at 6:46 am
Fun story.
Lots of good stories in this thread. Keep ’em coming!
ask any adrenaline junkie like myself,
No wonder you had an affinity for the gang from Olema. I rode with them for three years before I got over the most intense part of my addiction.
Climate science is not the only one that has trouble with politics.
Immune System Modulation – Cannabis Science
G P Hanner says:
February 16, 2013 at 10:03 am
I heard someone, can’t remember who, express your thought much more succinctly than either you or I could. They said
w.
My February 16, 2013 at 11:48 am and February 16, 2013 at 11:58 am appear to have hit the bit bucket.
No marsupials in my story. A one-eyed snake maybe.
About thirty years ago I arrived at London Heathrow after an overnight flight from Toronto and checked into a nearby hotel. Later on that day I made my way to the town of Staines to meet-up with some friends who had a riverboat tied-up next to the Swan hotel/pub?
After 30 odd hours of no sleep and almost as many beers I returned to the hotel room, stripped off my clothes and crash landed on the bed..
So at some point I have to get up and pee, right?
Right.
Except I forgot I wasn’t at home and took my usual route.
CLICK went the hotel room door behind me.
Willis, I lived “that dream”.
Alec, I also keep a loaded revolver at my bedside. BUT! One look at a naked, raging, cursing, redheaded, just-woke-up, packin elf coming at you would send any man back where he come from! I wouldn’t need to fire off a shot. Good thing. Can’t hit the broad side of a barn with that snub nose thing.
The oppossum story is interesting. Like some other observers, I’ve never seen an oppossum actually “play ‘possum.” The dogs and I see them, usually at midnight (when the dogs go out for their ‘last chance’ pee), and the oppossums are invariably doing a slow shamble along the top of the back fence. The dogs sense them before I do and immediately rush out to bark. The oppossums invariably freeze, sometimes in mid-shamble. They remain stationary until I go out to try to get the dogs back inside. Then, usually, they resume their shamble along the fence top. Although oppossums don’t seem all that bright, they know that dogs can’t climb fences. A friend told me that when her dog ambushed an oppossum, the critter actually did play ‘possum. The dog sniffed the critter and moved on. When the dog was out of sight the oppossum got up and went on its way.
We’ve also had oppossums take up residence beneath our wooden deck. One morning I was power washing the deck and happened to look out toward the back fence to see what at first appeared to the the scruffiest Siamese cat I have ever seen. On second look I realized that it was a momma oppossum with her brood clinging to her back. All except one, that is. We found one lone baby hiding by the base of the fence; it hissed and bared its teeth when we approached. We left and checked back about an hour later; the baby was nowhere to be seen. We assume momma came back and picked up her baby.
BTW, oppossums are the American version of what are called possums Down Under. There are many differences between the two orders.
Alec Rawls says: February 16, 2013 at 9:46 am “Having once had occasion to realize that armed-and-pantsless puts a severe crimp in one’s range of possibly needed options,”
Robert Anson Heinlein argued for naked adventuring for just that sort of reason in one of his Scribner’s juveniles, Tunnel in the Sky. The protagonist’s survival skills are tested on an inhospitable planet. He is advised to go naked for the heightened awareness and induced reticence.
Heinlein is author of “An armed society is a polite society. Manners are good when one may have to back up his acts with his life.” The latter sentence is often elided.
keitho @ur momisugly 12:29 pm:
Quite so, I thoroughly agree.
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WUWT is my favourite blog and Willis ‘contributions are wonderful. Thank you to Anthony et al.
Keitho @ur momisugly 12:29 AM I should have written. Sorry.
Rhys Jaggar says:
February 15, 2013 at 11:01 pm
“Gentle hint to you: 3000 American dead on 9/11 is less of an outrage than 500,000 dead Iraqis.”
More offensive rambling from the morality squad. Proportional outrage? Wow!!!!
I think most decent people are outraged by any innocent death. As hard as I try I just cannot comprehend what kind of person experiences outrage proportionally.
Pamela Gray says:
February 16, 2013 at 7:15 am
Nasty hissing things! And there is no chasing them away.
————————————————
I was actually about to ask if anyone knew how these critters reacted to people. I’ve had a couple wander past my patio door at night; one was HUGE. Since the patio happens to be my designated smoking area I wondered how the monster possum would react if I happened to exit the house at the same time as he was passing.
Now I know – he’ll probably hiss, and I’ll probably smoke less.