Why Animals, and photos of Animals Fascinate Us
Posted: Tuesday, October 19, 2010
by Joseph N. Kolton
PHOTObrainiac
Summary:
Perhaps it is the brutal reality, absurdness and humorous antics of the wild animal kingdom that sometimes mirrors our own human condition. Maybe its admiration for their common sense that draws us to them?
Article:
All cubs, chicks, puppies, kittens and babies are cute, but then--
Mom lion catches the dinner, dad gets his first, and the kids get the spoils. No question about the pecking order here. Dad lion is a major chauvinist pig and nobody gives him any lip about it. It is what it is. We could learn from this.
Animals have no concerns about being politically correct. Ducks are ducks, geese are geese, eagles are eagleseveryone knows who they are and where they stand. And bears are allowed to do their business in the forest without environmentalists getting all worked up about it.
We also mimic them. Most species stick together in communities. Just like Irish neighborhoods, Italian neighborhoods Chinese communities, Indian communities and so on and so forth. Very few melting pots in animal communities, and they can also get downright nasty if you tread into their territory. Sounds familiar--they must be from East L. A.
Squirrels hoard food for the winter. Look at the price of gold--we hoard too, but our motivation is more greed than need--we certainly differ there.
During a salmon run Grizzly bears jockey for position in a stream. Ever notice fisherman during a salmon run, they even get up before daybreak to get the best spot.
Carnivorous animals do not cheat--they do not need guns or other tools to kill their prey or their enemies. That is a huge difference--animals believe in fair game. The rabbit has a chance to outrun the fox--tough to outrun a bullet.
Everyone has seen video footage of women waiting for a store to open. The poor guy opening the door has to run for his life to avoid the stampede. Lemmings blindly run off a cliff as one and animal herds stampede, wolves hunt together, maybe there are some similarities there too. Herd instinct, the pack?
Ducks and other fowl fly south for the winter. To avoid the cold humans flock to the south too, however the birds of flight look much leaner than the human birds one sees on a Florida beach. Maybe a more accurate comparison would be bears putting on fat for the winter.
No government health care on the savanna. When the pups grow up they are out the door and they certainly do not live at home until they are twenty-six.
Herons fishing on a sea shore are very territorial; they prefer to be alone with plenty of distance between them and the next heron. They get pretty cranky if another heron invades their space. Does this remind you a little of a crowded human beach. Some long beaked humans get mighty cranky if you get in their space too.
Gophers and prairie dogs build housing communities, where do humans live?
Fish go to school.
Humans also eat meat, and greens, and fruit and seeds and grains, and seafood, and sometimes each other--yuck.
Animals do not need counseling. That in itself is fascinating considering the food chain. They know exactly who they are; prey or hunter, and they act accordingly, they get it. Same thing in the human kingdom, there are hunters and prey, but humans do not get it. We go to therapy to try to sort it all out, and we still do not get it.
So here we are, politically and environmentally correct, governments over-protect us, and it is still a jungle out there. Maybe it is the animal in us, or is it that we need more animal in us?
Author:
Joseph N. Kolton is a seasoned entrepreneur, author, humorist and the founder of myPhotoLottery.com. For fun visit http://www.myphotolottery.com/animal.html
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