an animal communication blog

The Rabbit Hole

Thursday, July 19, 2007

Mozart Chronicles: Reality or Something Like It

Practical Advice on Modern Living from a Geriatric Cockatoo
Sometimes I tell people how Mozart talked to me, out loud, in English, in complete sentences and fully cognizant of what he was saying, and I get a half-cocked grin in reply, especially from people who have parrots themselves.
The ones who have parrots themselves get mad or jealous. Their parrots don't talk to them like that, they say. "Well," I reply, "maybe they don't because they know you think they're just a bird brain or that you think you're some advanced being when actually it's them who are the advanced being."

That's usually the end of the discussion. But sometimes I know the person is a true bird lover, who really does admire the intellectual capabilities of their feathered friends. And to them I say, "Well I think that maybe deep, deep down part of you doesn't really believe they're as intelligent as yourself. You maybe think they are somewhat intelligent but you still think you're smarter." Then that's usually the end of the discussion. Then there are the two or three people I've met and heard about over the years, who believe in the deepest parts of their soul that their precious feathered friends are not only equal in intelligence but also in every other way. And those people and I get really excited when we talk to each other because we've had similar experiences. Then there are those people who nod silently, who 'know' but are afraid to speak up for fear of being labeled a nutty bird owner. And lastly there are the people whom do have these experiences with their feathered friends and simply ignore them, unprepared for what it may mean.

Fourteen Years of Silence Broken
I don't know why Mozart decided to start talking to me this way. He'd never spoken before in his fourteen years of captivity until the day we brought him home. I feel he sensed my deeply seated belief that his life and my life were on equal planes. But, as I've noticed some animals do, he probably watched the movie of my life which is playing above my head in my crown chakra in an endless rerun and saw that one day when I was eighteen years old and walked into a pet store. I hurried through the store looking for a certain kind of fish food for my goldfish, Romulus, when I came around an aisle and stopped dead in my tracks. There in a much too small cage, as is so often the case, in front of me, was a majestic Moluccan King Lory looking out at me.

His eyes held me captive. In them, I saw an intelligence, a sentience, a depth and a sorrow of which magnitude I don't often even see in the eyes of my fellow humans. I choked, his sorrow filled my heart with a profound sadness and a sense of injustice. This is the surge of clairsentience that any true animal lover is familiar with. For weeks afterward, his eyes haunted me. I never forgot him. Today, my heart still pangs with remorse for the fate of this gorgeous, wild being who should have soared his whole life over the mountainous gorges of Seram, Indonesia.
So maybe Mozart saw that moment in my life, or other moments like it when I've connected with a nonhuman intelligence and been haunted for days and weeks afterward and been forever changed, forever pivoted into another being's point of view and unable to ever really go a full 180 degrees back to my own, wracked by some gross injustice I was powerless to stop.

But talk to me he did. Not very much at first, just simple stuff like saying 'thank you' and requesting favorite foods. I noticed his pronunciation was not that great though and I set about to help him speak more clearly. Parrots learn more about mimicking the sounds of human mouths by watching how those mouths actually form the sounds than by listening to them. So one afternoon, I set about to teach him one of the hardest sounds for a parrot to make, the 'b' sound, a plosive, as it's called. With my mouth close to his, as he hung off the side of his cage, I said distinctly, "Mozart, you have a black beak. Your beak is big and black," emphasizing the b's. He turned his head to one side and zoomed a big black eye up next to mine and said slowly but clearly in a sweet little voice reminiscent of Felix the cat, "And you don't have one?"

An Intelligence That Mirrors Our Own
My eyes opened wide and my jaw loosened and then dropped. I stared into his eye for a moment or two. In that big black eye, I saw glimmers of wisdom earned from years of jungle living and untold, harrowing adventures in short quick flashes. I thought about how this incredible bird was older than me, older than my parents even, and smart enough to be able to engage in conversation with a totally dissimilar species. But I didn't want to lose this moment. I fumbled and thought 'what do I have instead of a beak?' I parted my lips and bared my teeth, "No I don't have a beak, I have teeth," I said and tapped on my front teeth with my fingernail to show him the hardness of them. His focus turned to my teeth which truly fascinated him. He leaned out, reaching his beak forward and gently tapped one of my big front teeth with the curve of his huge beak. The two biological tools we shared, meant for rending food in some manner, clicked together and then he straightened up. His question was answered. He understood.


During that first week he shared with us, we immediately learned he abhorred any type of activity with the slightest hint of violence to it. One evening we sat back to watch Monty Python and the Holy Grail with Mozart. A favorite scene came on in which two knights engaged in a standing joust. As the knights heaved and hoed back and forth between thrusts of their lances, Mozart imitated and leaned back and forth and groaned and moaned much like anyone you might see watching a prizefighting match. Then one knight put his lance through the eyehole of the other's helmet and gallons of blood then gushed forth out of the lanced knight's helmet. Mozart froze, looked at both us to see our reaction and then screamed! He screamed and screamed in protest until we finally acquiesced and changed the channel. This type of violent entertainment was totally unacceptable to him.

The Parrot Pacifist
We soon learned that other unacceptable, seemingly violent, programming included basketball, hockey, and football. Any hint at all of physical contest and especially prizefights were totally unacceptable for us to watch with Mozart. Even if my husband, Christian, and I were to watch television downstairs with the volume turned down, he still knew what we were watching. We finally figured out he could see everything we could see and hear regardless of where we were physically. He would scream with a loud, angry shriek that was truly deafening. Even cracking an egg to make scrambled eggs on the weekend would elicit an angry shriek from the little Buddha Bird watching us in his mind's eye from upstairs.
Our penchant for blowing away virtual people and creatures on my Playstation was just as unacceptable. Finally I would explain to Mozart over and over again, "Motz! (pronounced Motes) They're not real! It's ok! They're not real! It's just a game (movie, etc.)." After several years, Mozart was able to handle television violence and Playstation games a little better but he still had a tolerance threshold. During that time we discovered the antidote for all this horribly upsetting behavior was to watch ballet or Riverdance or some such programming. Elvis movies were a favorite. He stood transfixed in front of the television gently swaying his head back and forth in the true Moluccan cockatoo waltz as he watched Celtic dancers or ballerinas seemingly float across the stage, and Elvis too.

The Humorous Buddhist
As Mozart loosened up a little with his Gandhi-like approach to life, he displayed a sense of humor too. Playing with Chris one evening, he playbit him softly on the thumb. Chris seized the opportunity to admonish our little peace loving friend, "Hey you bit me!" he cried to Mozart in mock indignation, "I thought you were a Buddhist!" Mozart swung his head out near to Chris' and said smilingly, "I am!"
After living with Mozart for about four years, I had come to rely on him for practical advice on daily living. Thinking he could foretell future events, I asked him about returning to a job I had very much disliked. "Pat," he said sadly, "don't go back." I ignored his wise advice and went back to that job, needing money very badly at that point. Six months later, I lay sleepless in my bed, pulling my hair out as I reviewed the day's events of working at an abusive corporation. Agonizing over the verbal abuse I dealt with daily, I could think of nothing to ease my mind and remove the heartless corporate vampires from my thoughts. At last, around 3am when all hopes of a restful night's sleep were lost, Mozart piped up from his cage, next to my bed. "Pat!" he said softly, gently, "they're not real."

Relief from Reality
Nothing in the world could have relieved my mental agony at that moment, nothing! But those three little words caused me to burst into hysterical laughter! I buried my face in my pillow and laughed as heartily as I have ever laughed in my whole life!

Of course he was right! They really weren't real! They were just hollow shells of non-awareness, judgmental sticks in the mud, stuck in the drudgery of the corporate rat race! They were just caught in the matrix of a slave world where people expend almost their entire lives in pursuit of the bottom line trapped behind a desk for fifty or sixty hours a week like captive birds in a pet store. I was still real. I hadn't sold out and lost my humanity in the process and caused others to suffer mental agony for the purposes of my own advancement on the corporate ladder.


I had learned from my sweet feathered friend that there is an entire reality of intelligence and altruism existing in natural harmony with the universe, the world of nature. I had learned that animals and every living being attunes easily, with almost no effort, to the universal intelligence to achieve whatever goal it sets for itself according to its desires. I had learned that wild animals living in nature were as evolved as they wanted to be and that we seemed to be more a pawn of our own evolution than truly free within it. The real world was the world where Mozart had come from, the rainforest, and in that place, spoken language is not a measure of intelligence, it is a veil that conceals the meaning of life which is simply to feel alive. I went to work the next day and put a sticky note up next to my computer monitor which read in large, bold letters, "They're not real." When the corporate vampires walked by, they saw it and looked unsettled. Who knows what they thought. It was their turn to lose some sleep.

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Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Mozart Chronicles: Magical Mystery Tour


Mozart's Magical Mystery Tour

by Patti Henningsen
May 27, 1784
Vienna, Austria

Wolfgang Mozart skips down a crowded Vienna street, coins jingling in his waistcoat pocket. Times are good. He's just completed composition of a lovely piano concerto in G Major. The main theme of it plays repeatedly in his head as he contemplates the structure of the credenza he'll add to the finale.

He passes a pet shop, a beastly place packed with filthy cages and various animals barely surviving. Suddenly, the composer reels about! He looks up at a bird cage dangling above his head and stares incredulously at the starling therein who is boldly and defiantly whistling the main theme from the concerto he has just written!

"Das war schon," he proclaims ("That was beautiful!"). In the compulsive daze which most people find themselves in during the moments they purchase an animal they understand little about, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart hands over 34 Kreuzer to the shopkeeper and proceeds homeward with his new pet starling. As soon as he arrives home, he jots down the song his starling has been singing. It is nearly identical to the theme of his just-completed concerto, not yet sold or even published.1

For three years, the bird and composer would be closest of friends and eventually, after the bird's death, Mozart would give him a first-class funeral. Mozart himself would end up in an unmarked, common grave with the ink still drying on his Requiem Mass--perhaps the greatest travesty of genius in history.

December 10, 1997

Vienna, Virginia

He's Leaving Home

After ten years, Don and Jane have finally decided to donate their maverick Moluccan cockatoo to Parrot Rescue. For a decade, he's perched silently atop his living room cage watching their children grow up and learn to speak. And watched the two macaws across the room receive all the attention he, as a wild-caught, semi-tame bird, cannot accept. His wildness has kept him at arm's length from the deep emotional bonding his species demands from their companions. Don and Jane are tired of feeling guilty and place a call to Dede, the Parrot Rescue coordinator. The bird they call Conan is picked up and on his way to four months of foster care while an adoptive owner is sought out.

Through a truly strange, serendipitous event, I make the acquaintance of Dede in person one day. We have actually known each other several years through online correspondence--we just didn't know we were practically neighbors. I tell her I want to adopt a large bird, as I already have two medium-sized parrots. My Amazon couple are starting to need me less and less as their pair bond deepens. The male, Pumpkinhead, now about seven years of age, has reached sexual maturity. I know it will be several years, if not more, before he returns to his previous, loving self and craves my attention as he did when he was three months old. After convincing my husband, Chris, that we should get a cockatoo, Dede tells me about this 'huge, pink Moluccan' she wants to adopt out to an experienced parrot person, like me.

I've Got a Feeling

That first night, we put the bird we had decided to call Mozart in a cage in our bedroom where it is quiet and peaceful. It was recommended that he be quarantined from our other birds for at least three months. Mozart, the big, pink cockatoo, would feel safe here and more like we were all roosting together. In the wild, according to villagers on the island Mozart is from, large families of cockatoos sleep together in their hollowed-out tree nests and snore loudly all night.2 Luckily, Mozart did not snore, but about 3:15am on the dot, he softly began imitating the sound of an alarm clock. He would do this every night at this precise time for the next week. I discovered that's what time his foster father got up every morning to leave for an early shift. The precision of Mozart's alarm clock call was eerie. I began awaking at 3:14AM and was amazed that he began his alarm call the split second that our clock turned to 3:15.

I'm Looking Through You

But this feat did not compare to what happened about 4:30AM that first morning. (Luckily, it was Saturday and we could sleep in!) Chris and I began stirring about the same time just before dawn. We were both awake and heard the sound of Mozart eliminating and the plop! of his droppings on the cage floor. Amazingly, this was followed with Mozart uttering, 'Doo doo! Good boy!' We both shot straight up in bed, 'Did you hear that?î I yelled to my husband. 'Yes! He said what Pumpkinhead always says!' Mozart not only was talking for the first time in his fourteen years of captivity--with perfect enunciation I might add--but he had somehow picked up on the phrase I'd been using for ten years to potty-train my other parrots (yes, they can do that!). How did he do this? He hadn't even seen my other birds and came into the house when they were already sleeping so he couldn't have heard them either.

What was going on here? I was totally spooked. I actually began to feel afraid of this huge, angelic looking creature who somewhat resembled a wedding cake. Softly scalloped tones of pastel coral and buttercup blend together all over his feather-cloaked body giving him an ethereal, unworldly beauty. For weeks I would stare at him for long periods like Danté beholding Beatrice. He would continue to speak during the next week, and ever on after that. Sitting near him, transfixed by his rose-like beauty, I wondered endlessly about his odd abilities.

Do not curse the king, even in your thought; Do not curse the rich, even in your bedroom; For a bird of the air may carry your voice, And a bird in flight may tell the matter.


Ecclesiastes 10:20

Unable to sleep anymore since I had brought this unusually talented bird into my life, I lay awake thinking all night instead of sleeping--as I am wont to do and as is my curse in life. Many thoughts swam through my head; I thought about the saying, 'A little bird told me...,' I thought about the legendary Merlin (the magical owl friend of King Arthur), I thought about Old Abe, the battle Eagle of the Union Army during the Civil War, I thought about Mozart. I queried silently to myself in my head, 'I wonder if Mozart's telepathic?' 'Yes!' he proclaimed from his perch, answering my thought question aloud, his first utterance all day. I froze in fear where I lay. My mind raced, 'Are you really?' I thought again. 'Yes! Yes!' he once again answered aloud. Two more times I asked him and twice more he answered affirmatively, 'Uh-huh,' and 'Yeah Yeah Yeah!!!!!' In the cold, dark room, I panicked, totally spooked and frightened by this revelation. I passed out from fear.

Across the Universe

The things I continue to learn during the next three years from my precious pink cockatoo, who happens to be an endangered species, would reverberate through my life and the lives of my family and friends. I was brought kicking and screaming to the conclusion that science as we know it falls far short of understanding even the rudiments of the natural world. And it would remind me, ever so oddly, of the story of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and his starling and what this genius of long ago must have discovered for himself from his little irridescent-feathered friend. To both Mozarts, I say, voila!


1 Sturnus, Vol. 1, No. 2 (Spring-Summer 1993), "Mozart's Fine Feathered Friend," by Malcolm Gladwell. North American Starling Fanciers Association.

2 BirdTalk, May 2000, pp. 76-83, "Spice Birds," by P. B. Henningsen. Fancy Publications.

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