Amanda Montoya Pelicano Takes Flight

It was dusk and the fading twilight glistened purple and orange across the gentle ripples of Biscayne Bay. A mile from land a fishing boat dumped a bag of chum in the water and a crowd of hungry pelicans began to fight each other for food. It was the end...
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It was dusk and the fading twilight glistened purple and orange across the gentle ripples of Biscayne Bay. A mile from land a fishing boat dumped a bag of chum in the water and a crowd of hungry pelicans began to fight each other for food. It was the end of another day, a long day at that–and every desperate pelican scavenged the sea for paltry scraps. Yet way off alone, sitting on a buoy, Amanda Montoya Pelicano prepared to take flight. She opened her pouched bill, as if yawning at the display, and turned towards the fading sun.

“What boobies,” she thought.

Slowly,
Amanda stretched her expansive wings, narrowed her brown button eyes,
held her breath, and with great expectation leapt from her perch on the
buoy. It was not eating that mattered to this bird, it was not art or
culture or sex or gossip, but only flight.

Amanda Montoya Pelicano loved to fly.

This kind of thinking, she learned, was not the way to make herself
popular with other birds. Even her parents were dismayed that their
pelican was not like the other birds, with no appetite or concern for
the flock. It was only the art of flight that concerned Amanda. The
craft of never faltering or stalling, of handling hard curves and wind
currents, of experimenting with low-level glides, and most important
swooping and diving, for no one in the flock could swoop and dive so
beautifully. Her dives ended not with the usual beak down splash into
the sea, but with a long flat wake as she glided the surface with her
webbed toes, walking on top of the water as if it were asphalt. For
Amanda was the only bird in the sea who walked on the water.

Her complete disinterest in being a scavenger like the rest of the
birds confused her parents. “Why, Amanda, why?” they asked. “Why is it
so hard to be like the flock?”

“I just want to know what I can do in the air, that’s all. I just want to know.”

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Amanda tried to be like the other birds but it was pointless. The
more she tried, the more she wanted to take flight. How could she
keep her mind set on a specific task, like eating, when the whole world
was waiting to be explored? With a wingspan of ten feet, and a sky with
no limit, the desire to take flight was just too powerful for the young
bird.

So, rather than be like the rest of the pelicans, Amanda spent her
time alone, three thousand feet in the air, soaring, gliding and flying
high in the sky. She would rise high until the atmospheric pressure
literally compressed her plumage. And then she would drop, like an
anchor, down towards the sea, with the velocity of a bullet, diving like
no one before her, only to pull up at the last second, to simply walk
on the water. Time after time it happened. Rather than prey for food
like the rest of the flock, she walked on the water, with grace and
precision, like a seamstress sews a dress, or a painter makes love to a
canvas. And this bird never got wet. Has there ever been a pelican who
never got wet?

I am done with the way I was, she thought. I am done with getting wet.

Amanda Montoya Pelicano concentrated only on flying. She did not
concentrate on Art Basel. Nor the Knight Foundation! Not Riptide or
Short Order. Just flying. The more she flew, the greater she soared. And
often with a pointed finger the city of Miami would look up to her.
“Look at the pelican,” they said. “Come on, pelican. Fly, pelican, fly!”

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