|  A 
                          couple of odd things have happened lately. 
  I 
                          have a log 
                          cabin 
                          in those woods of Northern Wisconsin. I built it 
                          by hand and also added a greenhouse to the front of 
                          it. It is a joy to live in. In fact, I work out of my 
                          home doing audio 
                          production and environmental work. As a tool of that 
                          trade I have a computer and a studio.  
 
  I 
                          also have a tree frog 
                          that has taken up residence 
                          in my studio.  
 
  How 
                          odd, I thought, last November when I first noticed him 
                          sitting atop 
                          my sound board over my computer. I figured that he (and 
                          I say he, though I really don't have a clue if she is 
                          a he or vice 
                          versa) would be more comfortable in the greenhouse. 
                          So I put him in the greenhouse. Back he came. And stayed. 
                          After a while I got quite used to the fact that as I 
                          would check my morning email and on-line news, he would 
                          be there with me surveying the world.  
 
  Then, 
                          last week, as he was climbing around looking like a 
                          small gray/green human, I started to wonder about him.  
 
  So, 
                          there I was, working in my studio and my computer was 
                          humming 
                          along. I had to stop when Tree Frog went across my view. 
                          He stopped and turned around and just sat there looking 
                          at me. Well, I sat back and looked at him. For five 
                          months now he had been riding there with me and I was 
                          suddenly overtaken 
                          by an urge 
                          to know why he was there and not in the greenhouse, 
                        where I figured he'd live a happier frog life. 
   "Why 
                          are you here", I found myself asking him.  
 
  As 
                          I looked at him, dead on, his eyes looked directly 
                          at me and I heard a tone. 
                          The tone seemed to hit me right in the center of my 
                          mind. It sounded very nearly like the same one as my 
                          computer. In that tone I could hear him "say" 
                          to me, "Because I want you to understand". 
                          Yo. That was weird. 
                          "Understand what?", my mind jumped in. Then, 
                          after a moment of feeling this communication, I felt 
                          I understood why he was there. I came to understand 
                          that frogs simply want to hear other frogs and to communicate. 
                          Possibly the tone of my computer sounded to him like 
                          other tree frogs.  
 
  Interesting.  
 I kept working. I was working 
                          on a story about global climate 
                          change and had just received a fax from a friend. The 
                          fax said that the earth is warming at 1.9 degrees each 
                          decade. 
                          At 
                          that rate I knew that the maple 
                          trees that I love to tap each spring for syrup 
                          would not survive 
                          for my children. My beautiful Wisconsin 
                          would become a prairie 
                          by the next generation.
  
 
  At 
                          that moment Tree Frog leaped across my foot and sat 
                          on the floor in front of my computer. He then reached 
                          up his hand to his left ear and cupped it there. He 
                          sat before the computer and reached up his right hand 
                          to his other ear. He turned his head this way and that 
                          listening to that tone. Very focused. 
                          He then began to turn a very subtle, 
                          but brilliant 
                          shade of green and leaped full force onto the computer.  
 
  And 
                          then I remembered the story about the frogs that I had 
                          heard last year on public radio. It said frogs were 
                          dying around the world. It said that because frog's 
                          skin is like a lung turned inside out their skin was 
                          being affected by pollution and global climate change. 
                          It said that frogs were being found whose skin was like 
                          paper. All dried up. It said that frogs are an "indicator 
                          species". 
                          That frogs will die first because of the sensitivity.   Then, 
                          I understood. 
  The 
                          frogs have a message for us and it is the same message 
                          that some sober 
                          folks have had for us. "There are no more choices." 
                          We have reached the time when we must be the adults 
                          for the planet, for 
                          the sake of the future generations of human 
                          and for frogs.    Because 
                          we are related. 
  Then 
                          I understood that there are no boundaries, 
                          that there is no more time.   That 
                          we, for the sake of our relatives must act now.   And 
                          then I understood, not only why the frog was there, 
                          but, also why I am here.  (689 words) ↑TOP |