The other night I was waiting for some friends to pick me up for our night out. While I was waiting for them to arrive, I decided to straighten up the kitchen. On the marble countertop next to the cutting board was a small dark fleck. Assuming it was a breadcrumb or other random bit of foodstuff that goes flying around the kitchen whenever I get over-hungry, I picked it up to throw it away.
Immediately something felt weird: The breadcrumb was sticking to my thumb. And not in a “breadcrumb covered in chocolate pudding” kind of way, but almost latched on. I opened the trash and tried to flick it off, and that’s when I felt the sting. Not of regret or inflated gas prices, but a literal sting. I brought my thumb close to my face and there, clutching my thumb with all it's tiny might, was a little baby bee.
My gut instinct was to yelp and dance around like an Indian until it came off, but for the briefest second I thought “Man up, Sharpie!” (Is it bad that, as a woman, I empower myself with machismo?)
Halfway through thinking all this I began to violently shake my hand and bang it against several things, like the countertop, my leg, the refrigerator and my other hand. I figured a compromise of flailing without making any sissy guttural noises was the appropriate response. Baby steps.
Finally, the little bee fell off my finger and into the trash. I looked down at it on top of a heap of magazines and bean salad and thought, “What up now, bitch?” I turned on the light and noticed that the stinger was still sticking out of my thumb. With a coolness that can only come with being a victor of war, I carefully removed it and threw it in the trash with Bumbley.
As I was running my hand under cold water, I took a moment to replay the situation in my head. Clearly, I thought, the bee must have been nearly dead for it to lay so still on the countertop. What had happened? How did a nearly dead bee end up in my kitchen? Was he beaten and left for dead by a rival hive? Did he get lost in my air conditioning duct and, after a harrowing, chilly journey, end up (to his ultimate dismay!) to have made it inside instead of out? Or did it go full-retard?
It was then that I started to feel a bit ashamed of my actions. Here’s this undersized bee, on the brink of death in an unfamiliar place, yet when an enormous human thumb closes on it, it still, still summons the energy somehow, someway to battle back, not go down without a fight, to use the last of its energy to preserve what little time it had left to think about his comb, that time he and the Queen’s daughter got in trouble for flying off to the orange grove and staying out past curfew. And here I was acting like a wuss. That brave bee didn’t deserve to die. I did. He is the better warrior than me.
Too bad the bitch ate it.

3 comments:
You funny. Reeeeeal funny.
Thank goodness my husband is at work and can't hear me laughing out loud like a goof while reading this post.
heee heeee poor bumbley. You know what? We have a REAL bee issue. If we keep losing the bees we will be pollination- doomed. :-( Yay for bees.. sep when they sting.
Post a Comment