You Too

I saw a YouTube video of an owl inside its nest during a storm. 

The scientists had installed a hidden camera in its little hollow. 

The clip surprised me, in that the owl appeared very frightened.

I hadn’t pictured birds as being scared of thunder and lightning. 

They’re at one with nature, I figured. It could never shock them. 

But this one staggered backward until its back ran into the wall. 

It moved just the way someone will when an earthquake begins, 

Or after walking into a hallway only to find a wild animal there. 

Ever since seeing that clip, I do not experience storms the same. 

Now when the lightning flashes white, and I wait for the boom, 

I think about them, in their hollows, in forest and field, millions 

Of tiny hearts racing and parents trying to cover their nestlings. 

The landscape is full of that feeling. An owl in a video looks up. 

Its eyes are big and round, not certain what any of this portends, 

And follow the sound of the wind-driven rain outside the room.

John Jeremiah Sullivan is a writer who lives in Wilmington, North Carolina, where he cofounded the nonprofit research initiative Third Person Project.
Originally published:
September 8, 2025

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