Mousetrap

in hive-107855 •  2 years ago  (edited)

Mousetrap...?

[Deutsch im Anschluss]

An acquaintance of mine used to catch mice with a live trap and then take them away. "You have to transport them some distance, otherwise they will find your house again," he told me. "How far, approximately?" "Well, about two kilometres. Better still further."

As a child I had learned about the old familiar mousetraps in which the mice want to nibble the bait (bacon or cheese), release a catch via a small flap and as a result get a wire shackle driven by a tight spring in the neck. If they don't die immediately, they can't get away. As children we played with this thing and got many a painful blow on our fingers.

The live traps seem to be friendlier. But are they really? What happens to the mouse that is released alive? It is taken so far away that it can no longer find its kin. Will it make contact with another clan? Will it become an easy victim of a mouse hunter or a terrain trap in an unfamiliar area? Will it collapse from the stress of it all? I don't know, but I could well imagine some of it. And that's why I'm not so sure whether a mousetrap as a live trap is actually less cruel than such a trap that immediately breaks the mouse's neck.

What about a dead mouse, anyway? Does it have an immortal soul? Will I see it again in the afterlife, will it forgive me? Is an afterlife conceivable? Again I have doubts and don't really know. Maybe I should put a new, unused mousetrap on my desk, without bait, but strung up. It could remind me of the death that is imminent for everyone and of the open question of what happens afterwards to the individual, to life, to being.

Translated with www.DeepL.com/Translator (free version)


Mausefalle?

Ein Bekannter von mir fing Mäuse mit einer Lebend-Falle und brachte die Tierchen dann weg. „Dabei musst du sie schon einige Entfernung weit transportieren, sonst finden sie dein Haus wieder“, sagte er mir. „Wie weit denn ungefähr?“ „Naja, so zwei Kilometer. Besser noch weiter.“

Als Kind hatte ich die altbekannten Mausefallen kennen gelernt, in denen die Mäuse den Köder (Speck oder Käse) naschen wollen, dabei über eine kleine Klappe eine Sperre lösen und infolgedessen eine von einer strammen Feder getriebenen Drahtbügel in den Nacken bekommen. Wenn sie nicht sofort tot sind, so können sie dann doch nicht mehr weg. Als Kinder haben wir mit dem Ding gespielt und dabei so manchen schmerzhaften Schlag auf die Finger bekommen.

Freundlicher scheinen da die Lebend-Fallen zu sein. Aber sind sie das wirklich? Was passiert mit der lebend ausgesetzten Maus? Sie wird so weit weg gebracht, dass sie ihre Sippe nicht mehr findet. Gewinnt sie Anschluss an eine andere Sippe? Wird sie in der ihr unbekannten Gegend leichtes Opfer eines Mäuse-Jägers oder einer Gelände-Falle? Bekommt sie vom Stress des ganzen Geschehens einen Kollaps? Ich weiß es nicht, aber ich könnte mir manches davon gut vorstellen. Und darum bin ich nicht so sicher, ob eine Mausefalle als Lebend-Falle tatsächlich weniger grausam ist als eine solche Falle, die der Maus sofort das Genick bricht.

Was ist überhaupt mit einer toten Maus? Hat sie eine unsterbliche Seele? Werde ich sie im Leben nach dem Tod wiedersehen, wird sie mir verzeihen? Ist ein Leben nach dem Tod vorstellbar? Schon wieder habe ich Zweifel und weiß es nicht so recht. Vielleicht sollte ich mir eine neue, unbenutzte Mausefalle auf den Schreibtisch stellen, zwar ohne Köder, aber aufgespannt. Sie könnte mich an den jedem bevorstehenden Tod erinnern und an die offene Frage, was danach ist mit dem Individuum, mit dem Leben, mit dem Sein.



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You have very interesting questions born in your head from the thought of mice. I would like to talk with you over a "glass of tea" about being and about everything that exists.

"All dogs go to heaven." - is a 1989 animated musical fantasy adventure comedy-drama film directed by Don Bluth and co-directed by Gary Goldman (his directorial debut) and Dan Kuenster.

Perhaps we can say that all "mice go to heaven". Or not? But I can't say this for sure about rats that should burn in hell if there is one for them.
But this is nature, they are not to blame for their essence. This is what Mother Nature made them. Or was it God?
Do you believe in God? The Church denies the soul of animals. The Church says that only man has a soul. But it seems to me that a huge number of people have rat poop instead of a soul. And it's not Nature's fault, but man himself.

I am not angry at the mice that eat carrots in my beds. It's delicious and they really like it. I don't swear at mice because they often scare my wife at the rabbit farm. I just perceive it as a part of our life. And I try to shorten their lives. Cats help me with this. That's for sure Mother Nature Herself has made such a food chain.

  ·  2 years ago (edited)

Do you believe in God?

Yes, I do.
Nevertheless I do not believe in an immortal soul, neither in animals nor in humans.

"Soul" is - in my opinion - a concept of thinking about consciousness, responsibility and freedom. Outside the human mind, there is no such thing.

But within the human mind and the concept of "soul", there is such a thing as evidence for the souls of animals as well as humans.

If and in so far the church (or you or me) thinks of the soul as the sum of self consciousness and self awareness and self reflection, there are nearly no animals with a soul.

To cut a very long story very very short, I think of the "soul" as of the part of a being which feels: "God is!"
This part may be well-kept or neglected...

I like to watch movies and cartoons related to the soul or something similar. There is a wonderful cartoon "Soul" (2020, Pixar Animation Studios). Have you seen him?

No, I don't know it and did never hear about it.
(Maybe I'll find it on the net.)

  ·  2 years ago (edited)

The Church denies the soul of animals.

This is of little interest, as the Church also denied that the earth is spherical in shape or that it revolves around the sun.

Does the Earth revolve around the Sun? Isn't she supported by elephants? 😂😂😂

  ·  2 years ago (edited)

By 4 elephants which run
very fast around the sun
(ca. 30 km / sec !)
just a little bit elliptic
thus defining the ecliptic

;-)

I was a little bit wrong. The world rests on 3 whales! Make a request to Google and you will see these whales. 😂😂😂

But often they have different names

  ·  2 years ago (edited)

So, they swim in money, and money is the plane and level of the total eclipse?

Cats help me with this.

Fine!

TEAM 5 CURATORS

This post has been upvoted through steemcurator08. We support quality posts anywhere and with any tags. Curated by: @bambuka

🙏🙏🙏 thanks, @bambuka

Yep, I agree, you gotta take them away, far away else they will come and trap you! haha.

You are trapped anyway!

Some mouses don't mind getting trapped though 😁

Oh.. yes anytime any day! 😁

Does it have an immortal soul?

Yes, it does.. 👹

Insider knowledges ;-))

@ty-ty I think there is a philosophical style hidden in everything you say, what is that talk about the soul of a mouse and its revival, how great are your thoughts. But do the souls of all the living beings in this universe return here after death? This is a very thought-provoking topic on which many scholars think day and night.
Thank you for your philosophical thinking and beautiful story.

Thanks for reading.
;-)

welcome sir.

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Congratulations! This post has been upvoted through steemcurator04. We support quality posts , good comments anywhere and any tags.
Curated by : @stef1

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