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| Red-tail vs. Raven Above Blue Heron Lake |
I think of curiosity in one of two ways, either as a feeling that drives me to explore, or as a kind of conundrum that I might enjoy but have little interest in exploring. Usually, though, a curiosity will drive my curiosity.
According to a Google AI overview, "Curiosity is a strong desire to learn, explore, or understand something. It drives inquisitiveness, investigation, and learning. As a fundamental human trait, it fuels discovery and personal growth."
Of course, the AI is being anthropomorphic. Animals can be curious too. And even if we've never seen a cat that was killed by curiosity, we understand the meaning of the proverb. Explore sagaciously.
A play on the saying goes, "Curiosity killed the cat, but satisfaction brought it back." Which either means zombie cats are running around, or it can be satisfying to follow our curiosity. Me, I've always been one to wonder what's around the next bend, and I love that every day presents a new one.
Curiosity can lead us into rabbit holes of perhaps unknowable depth as answers beget more questions, or answers arrive that are heavier than we could have imagined. How deep we go depends on when the fuel of our curiosity runs out. Sometimes we need to inquire all the way to satisfaction, but we can also give up on a line of inquiry with little loss. Out in nature I'm often satisfied to let a mystery be.
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| Pair of Red-tails Above Bison Paddock |
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| It was a squirrel stand-off, and I didn't stick around to see how it might end. |
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| A curious scrub jay landed nearby, perhaps more interested in whether the human had peanuts than whatever the squirrels were up to. |
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