Page 4—The Perquimans Weekly Perspectives September 17, 1996 The Perquimans Weekly 1932 119 W. Grubb St., P.O. Box 277, Hertford, N.C. 27944 426-5728 Tim Hobbs, Publisher Susan R. Harris, Managing Editor Shirley Pizzitola, Administrative Assistant Anzie Ziemba, Account Executive The Perquimans Weekly (USPS 428-080) is published each Thursday by The Daily Advance, 216 S. Poindexter St., Elizabeth City, N.C. 27909. Subscription rates are $24.20 per year in-state, $26.40 per year out-of-state, single copy rate 35 cents. Second class postage paid in Hertford, N.C. 27944. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to P.O. Box 277, Hertford, NC 27944. Notes from a blind S ince child hood, I’ve always had special little eavesdropping spots in the woods where I could learn and watch what went on around me without dis turbing the lives of the ani- . mals. Some were constructed by me. Some were mere bushes I hid behind, or fallen trees. There was even an old, caved-in house in the cen ter of a meadow that I’d settle down beside and prop my back against in comfort while I observed the goings on from the busy meadow to the tim ber line due south of me. It was there one late after noon that I witnessed two buck deer in battle, and on another occasion had the privilege of seeing, for the first time, a fox teaching her young to hunt. I was always careful to wear one of daddy’s old gray shirts when I used this unique blind, because the color simply melted into the faded boarding of the abandoned house. It is stiU believed that many ani mals are color blind, but in those days even most books declared them aU to be. I took no chances, as my thoughts have always been that we know pre cious less about the ani mals than they about us. Long hours camou flaged as a bush or crouched in some blind often proves uneventful as well as uncomfortable. Indeed, it can be danger ous, too. I am usually near a tree when observing, or perched in the top of one. If there’s one fact I’ve learned from my years of nature study it’s a healthy respect for lightning, espe cially when I’m a living antenna in a tree bough being raked by a thunder storm. I’ve had my mole cules arranged more than once by close by lightning strikes, and no longer push my luck. Recently, on one of those rare cooler days of sum mer, I visited a long-aban doned blind I’d used over twenty years ago. Though remnants remained, it was useless, but the area around the blind had improved greatly with age, unlike many these days totally destroyed by log ging or development. I obtained permission from the land owner to use the blind again, and set out to reinforce and redesign it. There was not enough time in my writing sched ule to actually use it then, but a month later I returned for the pure plea sure of it. I carried with me plenty of snacks, water. Mure in a Nutshell Gail Roberson some field guide books, my most pow erful binocu lars, my emer gency asthma medication and my field journal and pencils. In this journal I always record the activity around the blind as well as do simple art sketches of the animals or insects. The day I picked to return for actual field work was one of summer’s hottest, but mundane mat ters such as that and hordes of yeUow flies are worth it all once you get your first glimpse of a fawn or owl. I hitched my sack across my shoulders and climbed the makeshift ladder into the branches of the beech. I made haste to settle in, for I’d seen some blackberry vines nearby, and expected many visi tors to them before dark. I got comfortable. Overhead soared a red-tailed hawk who passed that way again in thirty minutes dangling something from one claw. Another hour went by with nothing but the hum of mosquitoes for compa ny. But there are rewards for patience and persis tence, and soon a pair of doves settled on a branch of my tree, preening and cooing and courting like teenagers. I focused atten tion on them for a while untU distracted by a move ment in the distance. Even without the binoculars I could well detect the large buck whose golden-brown coat blended with the high meadow grasses. He paused at the edge of the forest, sniffed the air and took a few steps forward, sniffed again, pawed the sandy ground and munched his way towards me. The drum of a wood pecker echoed around the beech and crows argued across the hedgerow from which drifted a swallow tail butterfly. Soon the deer left for greener pas tures, but almost on cue, in his place arrived a hoard of small yellow but terflies. They flitted and tasted, and eventually landed on the meadow grasses to lay their eggs. I glimpsed a brown rabbit, identified two snakes and well over a dozen birds in a short while in my blind that afternoon. I’ve returned many times since. I’ve even allowed a photographer friend to share the blind with his camera equip ment. My mini-vacations in a blind are free and soothing to the soul, edu cational and entertaining, and I use one every chance I get. Kids reflect upbringing W ARNING! con tents of this article may step on some toes. I know because my own feet look like boat paddles. With the ever increasing con cerns about juve nile delinquency, recently we have been seeing and hearing more and more studies on “juvenile delinquency profiles.” These profiles suggest par ticular traits or indicators which predict that a young person may be at a high risk of becoming a delin quent. I have a better idea. Let’s profile the parents or guardians of the kids who are committing violent crimes and other felonies. Then, we can target other children for concern and attention. The parental behavior warning signs are: 1. Those parents whose jobs come first. You would be amazed at how many parents don’t even accom pany their child to Juvenile Court because quote, “I can’t afford to miss work.” Consciously or subcon sciously, these parents’ jobs are given priority in their View from the Bench District Court Judge Edgar Barnes lives and the children can’t help but know this. This is detrimental in two major ways. First, it steals valu able and irre placeable time and experi ences between parent and child, which both will regret in years to come. Secondly, it damages a child’s sense of self esteem to see what is really impor tant to her/his parents. 2. The parents who watch TV, read the paper, plf, fish or pursue other activities more than they talk to their child. Failure to communi cate with our teenagers for whatever reason, keep par ents ignorant of their child’s desires, ambitions, worries and influences dur ing a very fragile and impressionable time in their life. A child’s person ality, beliefs, value system and life style are learned from their parents. If par ents don’t take the time to talk to and listen to their children, someone else or Hollywood will become the role models. 3. Parents who never let their child suffer conse quences of her/his own neg ative behavior. God has put into place natural laws which dictate that if a per son causes harm to another, she herself wUl suffer harm, maybe not in the same way or at the same time but certainly This law is intended to be learned at a very early age in order to allow us to avoid commit ting acts which result in devastating retributions. Just as a child must learn that if he touches fire he will be burned, he must also learn that if he breaks the law he will be punished. We do not do our children any favors by teaching them, as a result of our over protec tiveness, that they can get away with anything and avoid all consequences. It is often the case that we must suffer in order to be saved. 4. Parents who never demand or maintain obedi ence and respect from their chUd. We have been brain washed in this so called “enlightened age,” into believing that to set stan dards for and demand them to be met by our children is in some way abusive or sti fles their creativeness and individualism, HOGWASH! Our entire social order is based on limits to our behavior. A child must ,/i 3e 1 r V Easy and hard S ome things in life are so hard and some are so easy. It strikes me as odd that those things that are hard are usually those things for which we are responsible. Those things for which others are responsible we usually see as really easy. What people have told me — and what I have over heard— lately lead me to believe the following things are hard or easy: Easy • Coaching. Everybody who sits around you in the grandstands at any sports event can tell you the minute after a play goes wrong that the coach should have called it differ ently Funny thing is, when the play goes right, usually the coach gets no credit. • Teaching. Everybody and their brother, me included, I must admit, knows exactly what we must do to get test scores up and graduate better educat ed kids. The trouble is, of course, that none who know all the answers devoted their lives to education. Ramblin’ with Susan Susan Harris • Rearing everybody else’s children. “I’ll tell you one thing, if that was my child. I’d....” Ever heard a sen tence begin with those words? It’s always easier to know what you’d do as a parent if the kid who’s done wrong isn’t yours. • Minding someone else’s business. See above and substitute “me” for “my chUd.” • Exercising. What with so many of us jumping to conclusions, running to teU gossip, walking all over other people’s feelings, slamming folks whose opin ions are different than ours, straddling the fence, climb ing the walls and pinning those we don’t like into a corner, it’s a wonder anyone goes to exercise class or the gym to work out. • Reporting. All you’ve got to do is write exactly what was said in exactly the right order and tell exactly what the outcome was—regardless of the fact that three people were talk ing at the same time and learn respect for others, their property and those iii authority from their par-*' t ents or likely not at all. No limits at home result in no limits on the streets. 5. Those parents who , encourage or allow their... children to continuously* watch movies, television*, programs, read literature, f play video games or surf internet sites that depict cruelty, perversion and vio lence. Children become by ^ learning and they learn exposure, and two thirds of television programs and 3Q percent of all movies pro* duced today are morally - ■- unfit for our children to 'jc watch. If a child sees 500., • murders a year on televi-. • sion and in the movies then what makes murder such a big deal anyway, right? It eases parents’ con sciences when a child winds up in juvenile court to think, “It wasn’t really our. fault.” As a judge I sincere ly believe that in only one , out of a hundred such cashes is it really not the parents^ fault. We simply get the propor tionate return out of our children that we invest in' them. 7r God save this State and/ this Honorable Court. Court’s Adjourned. Letter Dear Editor: " ' Since my letter last week concerning FEMA assis tance, Perquimans County was declared a disaster area. I would like to thank all involved who made this pos sible, and to FEMA, they were out to my house in 4 days and this has been a heavy burden lifted from our shoulders. I hope all who need assis tance will call this agency as they are very efficient and are out to help you. Thanks again to all who made this possible. Kathy Bleil Hertford everyone in the room who heard what you heard understood the discussion just a little differently • Policing. Forget the constitution and the bill of rights. If you know someone did something wrong because you were told by a reliable source who heard it from another reliable source, just arrest the accused. If you have to exe cute an illegal search in the meantime, that’s okay. After all, it’s not MY rights being violated because I didn’t do anything wrong, and even if someone said I did, the cops know I wouldn’t do any thing like that. • Bossing. We could run the company/government/ schools/law agencies/any thing else if “they’d” just turn us loose and let us use some common sense. To heck with the law/bottom line/rights of others, etc. Hard • All of the above when we’re the ones responsible for the outcome. Things others must deal with always look so easy. We wish our lives and schedules were as easy as the next person’s. But so many times we don’t know exactly what that next per son is going through. Easy or hard, we don’t know. Letter to the editor policy The Perquimans Weekly' weclomes the opinion of itS ■ readers. Letters should include the name, address"--:.; and telephone number of tcfe; writer. Letters without sigf~ natures or telephone num bers will not be printed. ,*■ Only the name and city of residence wUl be published*!' with the letter. 5 v; The subject matter shoidd be of interest to the commd- nity, not a personal gripe. Letters may be edited .for clarity and space limita tions. 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