Parrot Cries With Its Body [patched] < Desktop >

Parrot Cries with Its Body (Korean: 앵무새 몸으로 울었다) refers to a landmark 1981 South Korean film directed by Jeong Jin-woo

If your feathered companion seems distressed, they aren’t going to shed tears; they are going to use every feather, posture, and movement to tell you something is wrong. Understanding this full-body language is the key to being a great bird parent. 1. The "Silent Cry": Puffed Feathers and Lethargy Parrot Cries with Its Body

"crying with the body."

When we think of a bird crying, we instinctively imagine a high-pitched shriek or a repetitive squawk. However, anyone who has spent significant time with a parrot—whether an African Grey, a Macaw, or a Cockatoo—knows that these intelligent creatures possess a vocabulary of distress that goes far beyond sound. They engage in a phenomenon that avian veterinarians and行为学家 (behaviorists) call Parrot Cries with Its Body (Korean: 앵무새 몸으로

. In the story, the "cries" are not literal sounds but physical manifestations: tremors, illnesses, or involuntary movements that mimic the distress the character cannot articulate. This aligns with the psychological concept that "the body keeps the score," where trauma that is silenced by the tongue eventually speaks through the By the end, the story serves as a commentary on the fragility of identity The "Silent Cry": Puffed Feathers and Lethargy "crying

4. Why Do Parrots Cry with Their Bodies Instead of Vocally?