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The Eagle, the Road, and the Screechof Freedom…g

Posted on Tháng 8 12, 2025Tháng 8 12, 2025 By vudinhquyen

Sometimes, compassion doesn’t come with credentials. Sometimes, it just comes from love — raw, instinctive, and human.

It started with a photo. I posted a picture of a bunny I had gently petted — a simple, sweet moment. But it sparked something I didn’t expect. A woman from Massachusetts, who holds a wildlife license, reported me. She accused me of doing what she claimed to do “legally,” though her way, in my view, involves caging animals, breaking their spirits, and parading them for profit.

I don’t have a license. I just have love.

Facebook — surprisingly — sided with me this time. But the backlash didn’t end there. She and her followers began harassing me and my community, twisting something pure into something ugly.

And while all that noise played out online, something very real happened on a quiet road.

There was a dead bunny in the street. A Golden Eagle swooped down to claim the body — nature doing what it has always done. But a car came too fast around a blind corner. It hit the eagle.

The driver kept going.

I stopped.

The bird was alive, but just barely. She sat still in the middle of the road, injured, vulnerable. And despite the size and power of this creature — talons that could tear flesh, a beak built for survival — I knelt down until we were face to face.

In that moment, she could have ripped me apart.

But she didn’t.

We made eye contact. And something passed between us — not fear, not dominance. Just trust. I picked her up gently, cradled her like she was something sacred, whispered that she would be okay, and carried her to safety.

I thought help would come quickly. Best Friends Animal Sanctuary was just 20 miles away in Kanab, Utah. I called, explained everything — the urgency, the heat, the eagle. But their response? Indifference.

They said I’d need to bring the eagle myself and cover the costs. I told them I had no experience moving a wild raptor. I told them I was afraid of what might happen — to her, or to me — inside a car. Still, they said no.

So I did what I could. I sat with her. For four hours.

I gave her food and water. She took both from my hand. I massaged her wing gently, spoke softly, told her again and again that she wasn’t alone, that she mattered, that it would be okay.

And then… a miracle.

Suddenly, she stood. Stronger. Steadier.

She jumped. Flapped.

And flew.

Not just a few feet — but high. Powerful. Free.

She circled once above us, let out a triumphant screech that echoed through the hot desert air, and disappeared into the sky.

We called her Goldie.

This wasn’t about politics, permits, or who has the right paperwork. This was about a living soul that needed someone — anyone — to stop, to care, to see her.

And I did.

I’m no expert. I’m not certified.

But I love animals.

And sometimes, that’s enough.

The day after Goldie flew, I went back to the spot.

Not because I expected her to return — but because something inside me needed to stand there again. To remember. To make sure it was real. The blood on the road had faded, the wind had swept away the feathers, and the desert was quiet again.

But I wasn’t.

Something had shifted.

Because when you carry an eagle — broken, bleeding — in your arms, and she lets you, and then she leaves you, stronger than before… you don’t walk away unchanged.

That moment replays in my mind more often than I admit. The weight of her body. The impossible softness of her feathers. The way she looked at me — not with fear, but with something deeper. Something that felt like understanding.

I think we both needed that day.

I didn’t rescue her. I didn’t heal her. I was just there — still and open and willing.

And maybe that’s what rescue really is.

Not fixing.
Not owning.
Just being there when it counts.

So when someone online tells me I don’t have a license, that I’m unqualified to care, that only the experts should touch what’s wild — I remember Goldie.

I remember that she chose to rest with me. Chose to eat. Chose to trust.

And I wonder how many moments like that are missed because someone’s waiting on permission — waiting for credentials or protocols or some invisible stamp that says you’re allowed to care now.

The truth is: compassion doesn’t wait.

It acts.

It kneels down in the middle of the road.
It whispers soft words to sharp talons.
It sits for hours in the heat.
And sometimes, if you’re lucky, it watches something broken rise again.

So no, I’m not certified.
I’m not trained.

But I was there.

And when she flew — when we flew — no one could tell me I wasn’t enough.

After a harmless photo of her petting a bunny sparked online harassment from a licensed wildlife handler, one man found himself defending her compassion.

But while critics argued over rules, something far more real was unfolding on a desert road.

A Golden Eagle had been struck by a car and left for dead.

He stopped. No gloves. No training. No hesitation.

Kneeling face-to-face with a bird who could have torn her apart, he saw something else: trust. And with that trust, he gently picked her up, whispered comfort, and stayed by her side for hours.

No sanctuary would help. No rescue came.

But Goldie — as he named the eagle — found something better.

A human who loved her enough to wait.

To feed her. To speak softly. To believe in her strength.

And when Goldie finally rose and flew into the sky — powerful and free — it was proof that sometimes, compassion doesn’t need a certificate.

It just needs someone to care.

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