Elisa said:
On the other hand, I cannot help but to feel sorry for the poor mouses always chased by everybody.
I can somewhat relate to this feeling in that it reminds me of my childhood years and those of vegetarianism - all animals, though especially mammals and birds were simply lovable and in need of protection by those 'evil' predators. Nowadays I think that this viewpoint was a twisted viewpoint related to my own suffering (as discussed also on the thread The Vegetarian Myth) and not seeing the intrinsic meaning/sense, or rather, the
reality of a biological system that is based upon the principles of feeding, thus predators and prey. Then, the brainwashing of 'a truly spiritual person will not kill anything', has been another big contributing factor in it, as the part in Darkness Over Tibet clarifies, like rrraven has pointed out. So this belief system simply helps in reflecting back to us the wanted self-image of being good/pure/spiritual, as well as it is reinforcing a subjective bubble worldview, that's kind of shielding us from the 'bad world' outside, or even negating it somewhat, osit. I'm not saying the desire not to want to kill is of no innate value/meaning, but it might be best to merge it with objective knowledge of what is: as rrraven said, mice are vermin and transmit disease, thus they are dangerous and should be dealt with accordingly, just as we would protect ourselves from, say, a hungry crocodile.