In the oak woodlands and backyards of North America, a strange ritual unfolds.
When a scrub jay stumbles upon one of its own, lifeless on the ground, it does not pass by in silence. Instead, it screams — a piercing, urgent cry that cuts through the air like an alarm.
Soon, others arrive. Not one, not two, but sometimes dozens of jays abandon their foraging and descend to the scene. They circle, they call, they wait. Minutes pass. Sometimes hours. No food is gathered, no play resumes. Only the dead matters.
Scientists call it a “funeral.” To the birds, it may be more of a warning — a broadcast that danger lurks nearby, that death has struck here. Yet, to the human eye, it feels hauntingly like mourning. A vigil. A moment of collective pause in the endless struggle for survival.
The scrub jay’s funeral is a reminder that awareness of death is not uniquely human. In these cries, in these gatherings, we glimpse something deeper — that even in the wild, life is noticed, and the fallen are never forgotten.
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