Trylife

TRYWRITES: Without my Dog I don’t think I’d still be alive.

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WORDS: Gary Kelly

Without my dog I don’t think I’d still be alive. Seriously. I love my dog, but first some background.

10 years ago my friend Gavin decided to take his own life. We were close, very close, doing the eulogy at his funeral close. Gav dying so suddenly was a shock, any sudden deaths are, but there is something about suicide. If you have been through losing someone close to suicide and come out the other side -a survivor of bereavement by suicide if you will- then you may ‘get it’. You may understand the very specific and individual bereavement a person experiences.

The feelings we feel are desperate, primal, it’s almost as if everything you know about the ‘rules’ of life are wrong. A loved one taking their own life, that is something that happens to other people, and then it happens to you. And then the world goes dark.

In the days and weeks after Gav died I know now I was in shock, at the time I thought I was coping well. In reality I was running around ‘helping’, helping with the funeral, helping with friends, checking in on people. The thing is, I wasn’t checking in on myself. Slowly but surely my insides were turning into stone, little by little I was forgetting how to feel. At least anything other than anger, shame and guilt, as misplaced as those emotions were. The taboo of suicide can do that.

People don’t know how to engage with ‘it’ like they do if someone has died of a heart attack. So the loneliness we feel of the loss of a person of significance in our lives becomes magnified as people move away from the people left behind as if they have the plague.

Tundra Zeb.

Tundra Zeb.

We’re encouraged to talk about how we feel, and people do mean well, but it takes a special person, a person equipped to navigate a discussion on suicide. For many even the mention of the word is like garlic to a vampire. At least that is what I found. I hope you didn’t or never do. I was fortunate later on in my journey to have the support of some great people, including a counsellor. But that came years later. In the 3 years after Gav died I was lucky to survive, I contemplated suicide and was close to carrying it out on one occasion. 

During this time I met Zebedee, Zeb for short, my dog. People overuse and often misuse the term ‘spirit animal’. It has become somewhat of a meme which means many different things. For me Zeb understands me and my needs on an almost cellular level. I know people have different spiritual or religious beliefs or none at all, I respect that, I absolutely believe with all my heart that Zeb was sent to save me. From whom I don’t know. One thing I am certain of is that he has saved me from myself.

Zeb is a rescue dog, a border collie, I think I saw something of myself in him and his situation, It sparked a light of forgotten empathy in me. I couldn’t leave him in that situation. I couldn’t leave myself in my situation. I know that now.

Before Zeb came to me, I could barely function, before Gav died I was a glass half full person, everything would always be alright. My career, a Manager in the Community Sector, was going well. I was delivering national projects, at a relatively young age too. An achiever. Things were on the up. My career and general life came to a halt due to periods of absence/sickness after Gav. My mental health was shot to pieces, my glass was not only half empty, it was smashed to pieces on the ground, and I was stamping on it, grinding it into dust. Watching the remnants of that glass, my life, blow away in the ill winds that had encircled my sad existence. Self harm essentially, I didn’t particularly care whether I lived or died. I didn’t particularly know what I was doing to myself. I am certain of this however: I didn’t care.

Zeb leads the way.

Zeb leads the way.

The thing is with dogs, well with Zeb, I can’t speak for your dog, or any other dog but I can speak for Zeb, Zeb just ‘knows’. Zeb would not allow me to mope, if I wouldn’t get out of bed he would pull the covers off with a joie de vivre and cheeky smile on his face which seemed to say: “I know you are irritated with me but you aren’t staying there. I love you, the universe loves you and we have fields to run in”. I couldn’t be angry with Zeb, he hasn’t got a bad bone in his body.

The thing is I didn’t care whether I lived or died, but I cared about Zeb, he got me up in the morning, literally. Zeb made me care about him and by extension about others, including myself. He rescued me, or did I rescue him? Sometimes I’m not sure. 

One thing I do know is my glass is half full again. I know you will never be able to read this, because you are a dog, but regardless. Thank you Zeb. You saved my life.



TRYWRITES: TREES AND HEDGEROWS ARE BEING NETTED- PEOPLE ARE FIGHTING BACK.

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WORDS: Punk Food Bandita

Nets are appearing on trees and hedgerows across Britain, attracting attention and condemnation from locals and wildlife experts. The practice is mainly used by property developers waiting for planning permission to build on land and wanting to deter any wildlife which may prove to be a hindrance if they make their home there. A branch of Tesco’s also provoked controversy this month when it erected nets to stop nesting swallows from returning there, creating a backlash from customers that forced them to reverse their decision.

It is no coincidence that examples of this are being seen across the UK all at a similar time. Spring is the time when many animals, particularly birds will build their nests to raise their young, and trees and hedgerows provide food and protection for a wide range of animals during this time.  It would be an offence under section 1 of the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 for companies to disturb the nests or young of certain species, but currently there is no legislation to stop them taking measures to prevent nests from appearing, or even a requirement for them to be fitted properly to prevent animals getting harmed. Because the nets aren’t just unsightly. It’s an extraordinarily cruel practice. Birds and other creatures can often find a way through the netting, but not back out again, with birds in particular being prone to getting their tiny legs caught in the fibres, leading to a painful and prolonged death.

There is a petition circulating online, currently at about 140,000 signatures demanding that the practice be made illegal. But some are not waiting around for legislation to be brought in to protect wildlife. The hashtag  #nestingnotnets has appeared on Twitter, encouraging people to report on locations of sites where netting has appeared.  Campaigners recently removed some of the offending items from several trees in Darlington last week after finding a dead dunnock in the material, citing their move as a preventative strategy to prevent more deaths. Housing developers have defended their use of netting, with Andrew Whittaker from the Home Builders Federation stating that developers are also planting a lot more trees, with about 9 million trees being cultivated last year.  But research has shown that bird populations are in decline, with the biggest drop being within the last decade according to the Common Bird Census. Loss of habitat is one of the biggest causes of this, with many species wanting to nest in the same place every year.

Practices like this are not new. In 2017, nets were also put up on the Tyne Bridge to prevent Kittiwakes from returning there. The poor quality netting quickly became damaged, resulting in dead birds being spotted hanging from it.  Even then, Newcastle City Council would not remove the nets immediately, stating they had to wait until wider maintenance on the bridge began. In the same year, there was an outcry when spikes appeared on tree branches that reached out over a private car park for flats in Bristol to stop them from crapping on the cars of residents below.


You have to marvel at the sheer arrogance of developers and consumers who feel they are justified in gentrifying a tree, becoming so entitled that they attempt to dictate who gets to come into their neighbourhood and not content with outpricing poor people or having live music venues that were there before their penthouse apartment closed down, they now turn their attention to those noisy immigrant starlings with loads of kids that are bringing down their house prices. The Tyne Bridge Kittiwakes are a good example of this. The birds are an endangered species that are fast losing habitat and this particular Kittiwake colony is the furthest inland than any other in the world. Kittiwakes sing like that elderly aunt we all have who gets drunk and belts out Danny Boy at every family funeral and owners of the £400,000 apartments complained of their droppings. Now I don’t know if you have ever been on a night out on Newcastle Quayside, but I have, and if you are worried about spine curling screeching and feral species shitting all over the place I can tell you that the birds are not the biggest source of this.

The good news is that nature nets can be costly and time consuming for companies to put up, but are almost completely free and surprisingly quick to take back down again, if anyone happened to be so inclined. When I was last in Darlington, the council had spent some time putting up pigeon nets under its bridges, which said birds were then getting trapped and dying in. This was quickly solved, as one resident told me by a “Tiny, angry woman with a pair of ladders and some scissors” who managed to bring all of them down in a matter of hours.

Modern life is eroding our connection from nature at an alarming rate. Having that calming picture of a waterfall as your iPhone screensaver is no substitute. Protecting that tiny patch of green space isn’t just good for the birds and insects that live in it; it is good for all of us.