You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
-Short Attention Span Theater-
The mouse koan
2006-01-19
To exterminate or not to exterminate? Expatica blogger Alice in Germany describes the moral dilemma that overcame her vegetarian Buddhist flatmate when she discovered mice in their shared house.
I think there's a broader analogy to the giant genocidal rat currently pooping on the West's living room floor...

Bruno once told me that in Germany you could walk for days and never leave civilisation - the opposite from Australia. We, however, live in the middle of a farm. At first glance it is really special: a dirt track through the trees, over the lake filled with water birds, past the horse stables, not a house in site. Then Liana pointed out it is the perfect setting for a horror movie, with the lake being perfect for body disposal. A walk one night through the neighbouring woods did feel suspiciously like the Blair Witch Project.

The shock of mice
Of course that is all idle fantasy. The mice were another thing altogether. A true shock to a civilised lifestyle. There are a number of other students who live here, four live downstairs and seven others live upstairs with us. Most are German but there are a couple of Bulgarian exchange students. We share a bathroom and kitchen with Ivanka, who has retained the temperamental spirit of her Yugoslavian forbears.

Depths of courage
I was lying on the bed peacefully reading my book when I heard a terrifying scream coming from the kitchen (and I rather fancy a similar noise might be elicited from somebody being hacked apart with a chainsaw). Naturally, when faced with a potential serial killer in the next room, my first reaction was to lie there and play dead. But, dear Reader, when faced with the death of a loved one (well, a hypersensitive, domineering housemate), it is true: I found courage within me I did not know I had. As the noise did not subside, and not wanting to leave Ivanka to face death alone, I gathered my resolve and went to her rescue. On entering the kitchen I found her standing on a chair, whimpering, while two girls held her hand and tried to soothe her. The offending mouse, having most likely long since died of shock, was now nowhere to be seen. I have to say I shamefully found the whole situation rather amusing.

Agonising over beliefs
For the next few weeks Ivanka agonised over reconciling her belief that she is a Buddhist, love-everything, left-wing, vegetarian pinko and her huge desire to see all mice blown to smithereens and rotting in hell. This stress-inducing conundrum was antagonised by the numerous unanswerable questions that the appearance of mice had raised. Why were they here? Where had they come from? Are mice not dirty? And yet the house is German-clean! My suggestion, that every house without a cat has to deal with mice at some stage, was taken as a sign of my naivety. It was conceded that perhaps this was the case in Australia.

The landlord's responsibility
Her torturous reveries were regularly broken by yelling down the phone at the landlord. Apparently in Germany the elimination of mice is the landlord's responsibility. However the landlord, being an unorganised, un-German sod, never quite got around to it. When threatened with rent being withheld, the landlord got off his sorry arse and sent around a pest exterminator. There were numerous household meetings in the hallway where various legal options were discussed. These meetings went unattended by the eastern Europeans. Someone said they had heard that Nora 'did not care about the mice'. In hushed tones it was unanimously agreed that the Bulgarians must in fact 'care about the mice' but growing up in a police state they did not know their rights. Or if they did, they were too afraid to use them. That made sense.

A true professional
When threatened with rent being withheld, the landlord got off his sorry arse and sent around a pest exterminator: a large man who set poison everywhere. A true professional, he took great pride in his trade, gleefully explaining "the mice think it is coconut, mice love coconut, and it burns them from the inside."Ivanka translated this for me whilst trying to keep the huge relieved smirk off her face (think Buddhism, think Zen, everything deserves life, it is just unfortunate that the mice are disgusting vermin that must die etc. etc.) Ah, the agony of reconciling who we want to be with what we can stand.
Posted by:Seafarious

#11  Gorgeous photos, guys!

Apparently, cats bring us mice becuase they are trying to teach us how to hunt, the same way they teach their own kittens. Unfortunately, as a species we are very slow learners. The same cat that in his dotage was puzzled by the chipmunk had caught a large variety of things over the years -- our mighty hunter he was. He tried everything, poor darling: rodents of various species, ditto birds, baby things and adult things, dead and munched upon, dead but beautiful, half dead, and alive but in shock; on the doorstep, at my feet, and once, memorably, a live pigeon in my lap as I was braiding trailing daughter#1's hair before Kindergarten. She got there late that day.
Posted by: trailing wife   2006-01-19 22:11  

#10  Living dangerously...
Posted by: .com   2006-01-19 11:54  

#9  
Posted by: .com   2006-01-19 11:49  

#8  mices need Prozac and peas.

Posted by: RD   2006-01-19 11:24  

#7  We don't have any inside our house but the cat catches them outside from time to time. She eats the lower half and leaves the head on the porch.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge   2006-01-19 11:19  

#6  Every house that does not have a cat must, sooner or later, have mice.

Or rabbits.

I never saw rabbits around the farm where I grew up. Maybe back away from the house, in the woods, but never within sight of the house. Then the cat we'd had for as long as I could remember died, and the rabbits showed up.

And the geese, but I don't think she kept them away.
Posted by: Robert Crawford   2006-01-19 09:54  

#5  Yes, and then there was the cat I "inherited" when I got married.

It too presented us with its trophies at night.
Unfortunately, the trophies came from the great outdoors. It seems that the mice IN the house were off limits. (must have been a union thing)
Posted by: AlanC   2006-01-19 09:48  

#4  I once had an excellent mouser, he would bring me his catches daily.

Problem was they were all alive and unhurt, not much help in the long run.

He'd lay them at my feet, they would sit up, look around and head for the tall timber, then he'd look down and was so puzzled when they weren't where he put them.

I suspect that the same mice got caught many times.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2006-01-19 08:55  

#3  Every house that does not have a cat must, sooner or later, have mice. Or, in my own case, my house had an extremely elderly cat who found the temporarily resident chipmunk(!) running across his feet puzzling.
Posted by: trailing wife   2006-01-19 08:36  

#2  Just hope you don't come back as a mouse dear woman.
Posted by: Sock Puppet O´ Doom   2006-01-19 06:13  

#1  Here you see a Syracuse center doing drills.
Posted by: badanov   2006-01-19 00:09  

00:00