DocM
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While driving home down a dark winding road last night, I saw the hindquarters of a deer having crossed on the left side of the road. I live in a part of New York which is deer country, and over a tenth of a second or so, thought "where there is one, there are others crossing." Usually, I can see them, waiting to cross one after the other. I honk the horn, as deer are mesmerized by headlights and don't move. There was nothing in the road. With a sickening thud, a deer leaped from out of my vision at the car, striking the right side and front bumper. The sound was indescribeable, and I shouted "Noooooooo!" But there was nothing I could do. It had happened. For those of you who don't know me, I am an animal lover. Although I have not had the personal conviction to become a vegetarian, I would not willingly cause another living creature pain.
A few hundred feet down the road, I stopped, visibly shaken. I was ok. I turned around, expecting to find the poor thing suffering, and I called the police, reporting it. However, I could find no sign of the animal, eventhough I drove back and forth several times.
I began to think, I could have died - easily. Were there guides or angels present? I didn't feel them there. The damage to my car means less to me than the suffering of one of God's creatures. I began to think - we do learn from these seemingly random events and negative experiences. But what was the lesson? What was I meant to learn? I wasn't driving terribly fast. It was pitch dark. I said a prayer for the animal, and tried, while meditating to contact it and tell it to pass over if it were suffering. I doubted that any animal could survive the impact from my car.
So I started this thread as not just a means to catharsis, but to pose a question. Do folks here feel that every seemingly random event is truly random (since free will reigns)? Or, is there a meaning behind every tragedy and seemingly random event?
Matthew
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