
Eastern box turtle. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Headquarters. CC BY
Which also means that turtles are frequently run over by inattentive drivers.
There by the roadside, these wounded creatures die. Sometimes they leave a trail of blood on the pavement where they dragged themselves to the other side. Any roadkill is disturbing to see, but something about the inner pinkness of the turtle showing through the broken shell pieces troubles me immensely.
Maybe it’s because the shell, perfectly designed to protect the turtle, failed to do so.
But turtle shells are not meant to withstand the weight of a vehicle.
The pinkness represents vulnerability to me; I automatically begin thinking of other vulnerabilities due to failures of structures meant to protect or to edify.
Brokenness occurs on many levels in societies. Governments fail to protect the people, businesses fail to protect employees, family members fail to protect one another.
As an educator, an instructional coach, I see how expectations grow greater all the time and how the weight rests heaviest on teachers. I worry about the cracks, the brokenness, the damage – for, you see, the children are the most vulnerable part, the part we cannot afford to lose.
Any alleviation of this weight, any solution to such brokenness, lies first with the drivers.
Whomever and wherever you are.
Pay attention.
Reflect: Lucy Maud Montgomery wrote: “All things great are wound up with all things little.” Consider the brokenness around you. Repairs and healing will not be complete in a day. Where’s a small place you can begin, in a small but positive way? Positive results only come from positive words, ideas, and actions – and awareness.
Turtles!! I love turtles and here in Iowa, our turtles, thankfully, stay in the water! However, living in Missouri, we had the same problem that you have in North Carolina, they just keep crossing the dang road! 🙂
While I love the description you give, my take, I stop the car, pick the little guy/girl up, and move them across the road. One turtle saved. Sometimes I’m there too late, and they get hit, but I save every one I can.
The last couple of lines, that’s where it’s all about, turtle, teachers, society as a whole: Whomever and wherever you are. Pay attention.
Thank you for this thoughtful slice! 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
Ah, we are part of the Turtle-Savers of the world! Thank you so much for picking up on that last line. I so appreciate your thoughts!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Wow. Two slices in one, really. I’ve been known to jump out of my car and block traffic so a turtle can finish his journey across the seemingly endless two-lane road. And yes, baby steps are needed for fixing and healing. Agreed.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I, too, have been a turtle-saver when possible. It hurts my heart to see them mangled – they just don’t stand a chance against a car. Thanks for reading and agreeing. 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
What a powerful slice. Thank you.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you for reading and for your response!
LikeLike