The Woman That Turned Into A Cave, and Other Consequences of Sleep Deprivation steemCreated with Sketch.

in #life5 years ago

Who disturbs my slumber?

I sat upright in bed, eyes shifting from side to side not unlike an angry enchanted cave from a movie any child growing up in the 90’s would know. My cave eyes were swollen, red, and exhausted. Silence filled the house for a moment to allow some doubt as to whether there actually was a disturber of slumber, until the sound returned.

It was a chicken screaming in the only horrible way a chicken knows—something like a prolonged series of high pitched squawks that sound undeniably like terror. It slammed into the screen on the other side of the window, seeming to rake across is as it zoomed by, then silence again.

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It is all a dream, I assured myself. It was barely dawn and the chickens were still snug as bugs locked up in their coop. No way was that a chicken—no way. This is what happens when you survive on four hours of sleep for a prolonged period.

I collapsed back into the bed. Sweet, soft, warm covers snuggled me back like the most loving of mothers—the bedding variety of a mother. Sweet, soft, warm sleep beckoned me to return to her, and I was instantly slipping…

Until the dogs started. Maniacal barks and growls coming from the living room seemed to jerk my eyelid-curtains wide open again.

Who disturbs my slumber?! My inner cave rumbled as I focused my swollen, bloodshot eyes on the doorway. I charged into the room like an angry cave would charge if it had appendages. I flung the French doors open, and the knob went clattering into the wall, again. The dogs charged out like a pack of wolves across the yard toward the chicken coop, where I caught a glimpse of a streak of color an instant before it disappeared into the woods.

Bobcat disturbs my slumber, I rumbled. A person never really sees a bobcat, they simply know it was a bobcat by the mysterious blur seen while in the process of it disappearing. And the pile of white feathers on the ground.

I looked in the direction of the coop, then I looked down at my underwear. Should I get clothes, or not get clothes? Caves don’t wear pants.

With that decided, I walked through the rest of yard to inspect the chicken coop. The dew was mingling with the dirt so that my feet were getting smeared all over, but that seemed quite appropriate for a cave with legs. The coop was still in its iron-clad, impenetrable state of the night before. Not having seen the bobcat in possession of any hand tools before becoming a blur of color as it disappeared, I figured the coop would be secure.

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This can only mean one thing: I can no longer count. Evidently I had miscounted the chickens when putting them up the night before, locking out one straggler. Caves are not exactly known for their arithmetic skills. I thought maybe I’d ask the six-year-old math whiz of a boy to teach me to count properly later.

Poor whitey. I walked past the pile of leghorn feathers, which could have belonged to either of two leghorns that were entirely indistinguishable, and therefore both shared the very accurate name of “Whitey.”

Big Dog was at my bedroom window screen, sniffing voraciously, like the scent of cat was almost as fabulous as the scent of cat poop. A strange noise came from nearby. For an instant I felt goosebumps rise on the backs of my arms. Is the creature still here?

A clearly pronounced cluck with an attitude came from above my head. There stood Whitey at the peak of the roof with a look about her that said: I just survived a bobcat attack and it is only seven o’clock. What have you done today?

“Sleep—that’s what I’ve done, and it’s what I should be doing now,” I said to her darkly. “That is what people that stay up into the wee hours of night do first thing in the morning! This is your own fault—shame on you for not going to bed on time.” I immediately realized the hypocrisy of the statement. “Come down here you silly thing,” I said more mildly as I walked toward the coop and the hungry bird flew down after me. “Thank goodness you can fly.”

I went back inside. The bed called to me, beckoning with its soft blankets and perfectly shaped pillows. I curled back inside it like a cave all covered over with foliage, hidden from view. Then the sound of little feet pattered into the room.

Who disturbs my slumber? I rumbled from beneath the covers.

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“Mama, I don’t feel good,” the tot said in her cute little tot voice. The six-year-old-math-whizz boy arrived, moaning “I’m hungry,” and I didn’t have the energy to ask him to teach me to count. Big Dog and Old Man Dog came charging in too, tongues hanging far out of mouths and enthusiasm dripping off as they came to congratulate me on a fun morning chase.

Everyone disturbs my slumber. It is a conspiracy. I lifted the covers up over my head as I shimmied into the middle of the mattress. “Let’s all take a rest in the cave,” I said. It was the only way to get any sleep.

Quick, someone had better invite that bobcat too.

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Great writeup. Loved the scene with Whitey on the roof peak. 😊

Whitey is a bird you have to meet in person to really understand the complexity. She is completely terrified of everything, and also completely demanding and obstinate. Basically...she's a typical chicken:)

Thanks for reading!

Most welcome, Ginny. Whitey sounds like an interesting chicken. I love seeing farm animals, especially chickens as I grew up on a farm.

I found this through creativecoin and loved it.

I have been having really heavy naps lately. But I don't wake up rested, I wake up feeling like I need more sleep.

Perhaps I should go to sleep instead of stay up reading about how you don't get any sleep.

I have the exact same problem...and it is 1AM...and I'm still awake. Thank you so much for reading, now let's both go to sleep :)

lol! This is so well written and so funny ginnyannette! Excellent job! So you guys didn't lose a chicken? She was the one on the roof?

Yes, she saved herself by flying up there. She was really lucky because she is one of only two in my flock that are very good fliers. The rest make short stints at going upward but don't usually manage too well. She also got lucky the bobcat waited until light, because chickens don't see well at night and she would have been a sitting duck...chicken.

lol! So she was unlucky that her owner accidently locked her out but she was lucky that she can fly! It's so true about the bobcats though, how they slink around and we seldom get a good look at them! We've been tempted to put up a game camera to see what comes around at night and then we decided we probably didn't want to know!

I feel the same way. I just don't want to know what is out there.

Florida's a scary place. I heard the Creature from the Black Lagoon lives there!

Probably not. The alligators would have eaten him.

lol! probably.

Big Dog and Old Man Dog? I'm already smitten!
You know it! A person never really sees a bobcat, they simply know it was a bobcat by the mysterious blur seen while in the process of it disappearing. And the pile of white feathers on the ground.
My first instinct is to rush off and tell all my friends about you. Naturally you've already met @owasco and @goat-girlz and the chicken-loving @mariannewest, to name only 3 my homesteading favorites from Freewritehouse. Fishing? @myjob is the go-to writer for those who fish! Empty nesters, animal lovers, animal saviors (@d00k13 rescued Jerry ), @redheadpei, oh man, there are so many of us!
LOL - I love the final line of this narrative.

Aw, you have a six-year-old at home?
I love this line from Whitey: I just survived a bobcat attack and it is only seven o’clock. What have you done today?
You really do have a natural voice for storytelling!

Big Dog and Old Man Dog are always the heroes of these stories. It is wonderful to have canine characters in my life :)

Nice to see there are so many like-minded folks out there. I have yet to talk to so many people. It is sort of strange how we end up running into the same people over and over again so that it seems like this is a very small place, when in reality there are so many other folks out there to get to know. Or maybe that is just a personal problem of mine :)

Thanks so much for reading.

Yes--"so many like-minded folks out there" and "we end up running into the same people over and over again so that it seems like this is a very small place, when in reality there are so many other folks out there to get to know. " #Hashtags help and the comment section of posts we like. There's a mathematical explanation for this. (And for everything in the universe.) But my brain isn't wired for math...off to find the next lyrical, well written post!

Oh, the cave! I left mine like 3 hours ago. It was nice and comfy!

I was able to transform from cavewoman back into just woman today because I got a whole 7 hours of sleep last night! Happy day.

YOU HAVE A WAY WITH WORDS! I've been out to the coop in my jammies armed with a phone flashlight when I thought a coyote had inspired the harrowing noise, found nothing and went back to bed, but returned the next morning to a pile of feathers and one fewer chickens. The previous night I had clobbered myself on a low hanging branch and not counted at all and the straggler, who had straggled before but been rescued from the overhead branch of a tree just like this story, was no more.

Lucky me, there were no more kiddies wanting food and love in the mornings, so I could get enough sleep.

This story FLOATS MY BOAT. Well told! Love this

Poor thing. We got lucky that the bobcat stayed up late, showing up just after light so that Whitey had a chance at escape.

Have you noticed that your chickens act nuts the days before an attack? It has happened twice that the chickens don't want to put themselves up in the coop at dusk like normal the night or two before an attack. Over the last 8 years we have only had two wild animal incidents, and both times the animals must have harassed the chickens for nights before so that the chickens were pretty spooked. Unfortunately, I didn't learn from the first time because there were so many years in between them, and chickens are just nuts sometimes and you don't know why.

No one is a proper chicken owner until having gone out to the coop half dressed and gotten clobbered by a branch :)

Thanks so much for reading.

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