Mind Control

Julia Butterfield

I am not afraid of spiders. I am not afraid of strangers. I can keep my calm around bees. I am not afraid of heights, small spaces, elevators, public speaking, or loud noises. I am not afraid of identity theft or car accidents or nuclear war. To me, these seem like things that can be avoided and therefore I can control them. As a child, I was never afraid of the dark or the old women next door. I am not afraid of natural disasters; when I lie awake in bed at night every sound is not a rapist or robber. I am not afraid of disappointing my parents (it seems as though I would have to work quite hard to do so). I am not afraid of dying alone, getting lost in the mountains and being eaten by lions, or hearing the word moist. But I am, embarrassingly, irrationally, inexplicably, and unalterably afraid of birds.

Specifically, I fear ground-level birds, the ones that, I am convinced, want nothing more than to sink their little beaks into my flesh over and over again. It’s not imagining such a thing that is troubling. I can sit here right now and write about it and not even flinch. But when I am in their presence, something inside of me freezes and I know that they are going to come after me. As a kid, I walked in wide circles around pigeons and seagulls on the beach.

Being a city kid, I saw pigeons all the time. I held my breath and watched them, waiting for any sign of movement, any sign that they were about to launch the grand attack plan in which all the birds of the world would descend upon me. When I was about seven, I tried to scare the birds back. I would chase them through Washington Square Park shouting, wishing I could feel as fearless as I pretended. Eventually I stopped because it didn’t make me feel any better.

When we moved to the suburbs, I was grateful that there would be no more pigeons. I was never afraid of a songbird perched on a high branch or a duck in the middle of a pond so I figured I would be safe from now on, except in the summer when we went to the beach.

But Westchester was not as bird-free as I would have hoped. My friend Amelia used to keep chickens, as her mother wanted them all to eat fresh eggs and live closer to nature. This was the sort of person Amelia’s mother was. Lisa let Amelia roam barefoot through Pleasantville and adopted wild cats to deal with their mice problem rather than call an exterminator.

The chickens lived in a coop in Amelia’s backyard. Out of all of my friends, it was agreed, that though Sophie had a tree house, Amelia’s backyard was the best, mostly because it extended over the wall into Hannah’s backyard, where there was a cool tree swing and the Welch’s trampoline. We were not friends with the Welches but often made use of their trampoline. The grass grew long and free, the trees had wide branches perfect for climbing, and whenever her brother was home from college he would set up a zipline that ran from the trees to the bottom of the sloping hill.

For me, Amelia’s backyard meant facing the chickens. The chickens couldn’t climb over the wall into Hannah’s backyard so we were safe there, but otherwise, when I roamed Amelia’s backyard, I watched for them vigilantly. I would convince myself that it was crazy and the next time they came near me, I wouldn’t be afraid of them. Then one would advance and I would stop, unable to figure out which way to go to best avoid it. Then it would waddle off and I would tell myself that I had been ridiculous—this was a chicken. Why was I afraid of it? I would sit in her highest picnic chair or on the railing of the deck with my legs tucked under me (a sitting position I hated) nervously watching my three feathered foes trot around obliviously.

Chickens have a habit of always managing to be in your way. Amelia’s chickens blocked doorways, got stuck under chairs, and stood obliviously in places where they could be tripped over. Amelia, unafraid of chickens, would chase them away, her arms waving in the air like a maniac shouting, “Stupid chickens!”

At Amelia’s birthday parties the lot of us would freely migrate between the kitchen and the 2.5 backyards through the sliding glass door. Her mom kept reminding us to close the door behind ourselves so the chickens couldn’t get in. There were never group activities at Amelia’s parties other than cake so it seemed as if children were constantly streaming in and out of the house.

I was sitting at the kitchen table with Sophie, playing cards, and soon joined in reminding people to close the door behind them, but some of the other children were just so infuriatingly stupid, seemingly unable to follow such a simple instruction. Soon enough, in the kitchen was a speckled chicken, which of course had predictably and inconveniently chosen the moment when Lisa was out of the room to make its grand entrance.

I quickly tucked my legs under me and looked to Sophie, who made a half- hearted attempt to shoo the chicken away, but Sophie had never been of an aggressive nature and was inexperienced with chickens so it was what seemed like an eternity of waiting, an eternity frozen in fear, an eternity of watching this five-pound feathery, speckled beast with barely an ounce of common sense befuddle its way around Amelia’s den before Lisa came downstairs again and shooed it outside with one final reminder to please keep the door shut.

Once one of Amelia’s chickens pecked me. The experience should have made me less afraid of birds; after all, I had learned that the worst could happen and I would not die, but alas, I still made wide cautious circles around Amelia’s chickens (who have since, sadly, gone to meet their chicken maker) and held my breath when passing seagulls on the beach.

Once when heading towards the ocean with my mother, I paused, unable to walk past the seagull that was just sitting there, watching me. My mother called to me from ten feet away, safe on the other side, “Julia! Come on!” There was a pause, and then, “Are you scared of the seagull? That’s ridiculous!”

I took a deep breath and ran past it, watching it carefully, in case it made any sudden moves. It didn’t. In the spring the geese that live at Nanahagen Pond have babies. Sometimes on the weekend, I ride my bike around the neighborhood, circle the lake a few times, up one street, down another, around the hill by the country club, that sort of thing. Sometimes I reach the lake and see a family of geese trotting across the path from the water to the woods or vice versa. My breath slows, I brake carefully, and wait for them to pass, still worrying that the momma goose might jump up and bite my ankles.

They always pass. The goslings are cute little mushroom fluffs with webbed feet. Their beaks are round and dull.

Normally fear is something I can control or at least rationalize. I was afraid of turning left out of my driveway when driving and not being able to see around the curve, so I made myself practice. Being scared of witches came and went (and then I befriended one but that’s another story). Being scared of those creepy guys at bus stations is rational. Besides, the bus station guys are avoidable and being in their presence doesn’t make me freeze up the way birds do.

I am aware that this is unreasonable. A number of times I have tried to rationally and logically talk myself out of it. Even when I am in the presence of a bird, I am aware of how silly it is, but that does not stop me from being afraid of them. I suppose that’s why they call it “irrational fear.” It’s not a paralyzing fear but it’s strong enough that it can control me, and I hate that something so irrational can control me. I never scream or panic—it’s a nice, secret fear—I just hold my breath and walk past slowly, so as not to startle my temporary captors.