Cat Forum / General Topics / February 2005
Sooty has gone
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Rob Stearns - 09 Feb 2005 15:52 GMT Hi Y'all Just wanted to share this with my friends and celebrate a life lived, in some small way
Tues 8 Feb 05
This year has been rough so far, today was just horrible...I had to have my other cat "Sooty" put down today......thats the second cat in two months. Those two girls were life long buddies and after the first one died Sooty just stopped eating, it was almost like someone flipped a switch............ then she developed liver cancer and faded away.
The vet says it was cancer and yes she had all the outward signs but I know deep inside she'd lost her will to live after her buddy died, I know that cat. I could sense the life force slowly leaving her and from her body language and demeanour I knew last night she wanted to go. I was sitting in my computer room in my high back swivel chair, She climbed on my chest and laid with her front legs on my shoulder with her face resting against my cheek...she stayed that way for 2 hrs as we sat quietly in the dark, I didnt want to move her. I had another cat three years ago that did exactly that same thing before she died, May sound corny but I think that was their way of saying goodbye.
Sooty was a beautiful long legged Burmese....., a gangly, sleek, black beauty. Highly athletic, powerful, with the most gorgeous soft shiny black coat. If you stretched her out she was almost 24" long. When she walked you could see her muscles moving under her fir, she was almost elegant. Everyone who saw her said she was so beautiful. She died while I cradled her in my arms, I'm delerious with grief right now, . I wouldnt wish this pain on anyone. Hopefully this will ease soon
Rob
vancats - 09 Feb 2005 16:04 GMT We had to help our 14 year old cat Selkhat go home 2 months ago, she had 2 close cat friends and we were concerned they would grieve too much. It was very hard for us but she was at the end of her journey and we helped her here at home. After what small spark she had left her body we brought her out to the front room so the others could see and sniff her before she went to her final resting spot. We still see her from time to time, her tail sort of looked like some of our other cats. The pain is huge but time has a way of easing it and the memories become sweet and special. Here's to our "silly cat"
Leslie
Holly - 09 Feb 2005 16:12 GMT Rob I am very sorry for your loss. This seems to have been a bad start to a new year, our purrs are with you. I firmly belive that an animal knows when its that time and I think they too know they will miss us and we will miss them and that is why they say goodbye. You know if you need us we are hear to listen. It will get easier with time.
Karin Gillette - 09 Feb 2005 17:03 GMT Rob,
I am so sorry but I am glad you had sometime together before she left. I am sure she was very sad about leaving you but she knew it was time.
It is always hard to lose a part of ones family.
Karin Servant to Neko and Cecilia Rae
> Hi Y'all > Just wanted to share this with my friends and celebrate a life lived, in [quoted text clipped - 30 lines] > > Rob Noon Cat Nick - 09 Feb 2005 17:53 GMT Strange that so small mortality should leave So large an emptiness! for as we grieve Your little life of few but happy years Ended for us, one who could understand Each subtle word, and answer hand with hand Had hardly taken greater toll of tears.
Yet why should we not mourn for as a friend? That name was yours; if every man would spend His life as well, earth were not hard to save. Grant that God made your heart and brain but small. What more has an archangel than his all? And all God gave to you, to us you gave. --Amelia Josephine Burr
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Our rooms are very still today, The loneliness...a void; That dented pillow mutely mourns Companionship...destroyed! That fluffy ball of purring fur-- My comfort--subtle teacher-- Has left a tender tolerance For every living creature. My traits and faults were audited By questioning, loving eyes; All tests of friendship were fulfilled By trust that verified. --Nellie Baldwin Rudser
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Until one has loved an animal, a part of one's soul remains unawakened. --Anatole France
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We who choose to surround ourselves with lives even more temporary than our own live within a fragile circle, easily and often breached. Unable to accept its awful gaps, we still would live no other way. We cherish memory as the only certain immortality, never fully understanding the necessary plan. --Irving Townsend
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Mankinds true moral test, its fundamental test (which lies deeply buried from view), consists of its attitude towards those who are at its mercy: animals. And in this respect mankind has suffered a fundamental debacle, a debacle so fundamental that all others stem from it. --Milan Kundera
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I believe that the loss of a beloved companion animal is like no other loss because our relationships with animals are like no other. Our culture tells us that an animal companion is an engaging toy, and that our grief over its death is alarming and ill-paced. And our culture is just flat wrong....Animals are more to us than we know. Their partnership with us is a holy one that endures across a lifetime and possibly beyond. --Susan Chernak McElroy
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I shall walk in the sun alone Whose golden light you loved: I shall sleep alone And, stirring, touch an empty place: I shall write uninterrupted (Would that your gentle paw Could stay my moving pen just once again!).
I shall see beauty But none to match your living grace: I shall hear music But not so sweet as the droning song With which you loved me.
I shall fill my days But I shall not, cannot forget: Sleep soft, dear friend, For while I live you shall not die. --Michael Joseph
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Comrades of our past were they, Of that unreturning day. Changed and aging, they and we Dwelt, it seemed, in sympathy. Alway from their presence broke Somewhat which remembrance woke Of the loved, the lost, the young-- Yet they died, and died unsung....
Fare thee well, companion dear! Fare for ever well, nor fear, Tiny though thou art, to stray Down the uncompanion'd way! We without thee, little friend, Many years have not to spend; What are left, will hardly be Better than we spent with thee. --Matthew Arnold
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THERE IS A NEW STAR SHINING IN THE SKY TONIGHT... by Sarah Hartwell
There is an old belief that the stars shining in the night sky are the spirits of those who have died. They have shed their earthly bodies and exchanged them for bodies made of light; thousands upon thousands of our dear departed friends all promoted to glory in the night sky. There is another saying that the brightest flame burns the shortest.
My friend, you were the brightest star in my own universe. While I burn on, my flame dimmed by grief and despair at your passing, the stars are watching me. They are too far away for me to touch, just as you have gone somewhere I cannot follow until my own star-time comes. They cannot be held close for comfort, just as I can no longer hold you close, though I held you close to comfort you in your final hours. We were together for such a short time, but the stars will burn forever.
One day I will grow tired of this earthbound body, my own star-time will come and my spirit will soar into the sky to burn with all those friends who have gone before me. On the inky cloth of space we will be reunited in constellations of joy. Until then, my flame burns low and dim and cold without you. Through my tears I look upwards to see if you are watching me and what do I see?
There is a new star shining in the sky tonight.
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LIVING LOVE (THE FOURTH DAY) by Martin Scot Kosins
If you ever love an animal, there are three days in your life you will always remember...
The first is a day, blessed with happiness, when you bring home your young new friend. You may have spent weeks deciding on a breed. You may have asked numerous opinions of many vets, or done long research in finding a breeder. Or, perhaps in a fleeting moment, you may have just chosen that silly-looking mutt in a shelter--simply because something in its eyes reached your heart. But when you bring that chosen pet home, and watch it explore, and claim its special place in your hall or front room--and when you feel it brush against you for the first time--it instills a feeling of pure love you will carry with you through the many years to come.
The second day will occur years later. It will be a day like any other. Routine and unexceptional. But, for a surprising instant, you will look at your long-time friend and see age where you once saw youth. You will see slow deliberate steps where you once saw energy. And you will see sleep where you once saw activity. So you will begin to adjust your friend's diet--and you may add a pill or two to her food. And you may feel a growing fear deep within yourself, which bodes of a coming emptiness. And you will feel this uneasy feeling, on and off, until the third day finally arrives.
And on this day--if your friend and God have not decided for you, then you will be faced with making a decision of your own--on behalf of your lifelong friend, and with the guidance of your own deepest Spirit. But whichever way your friend eventually leaves you--you will feel as alone as a single star in the dark night. If you are wise, you will let the tears flow as freely and as often as they must. And if you are typical, you will find that not many in your circle of family or friends will be able to understand your grief, or comfort you. But if you are true to the love of the pet you cherished through the many joy-filled years, you may find that a soul--a bit smaller in size than your own--seems to walk with you, at times, during the lonely days to come. And at moments when you least expect anything out of the ordinary to happen, you may feel something brush against your leg--very very lightly. And looking down at the place where your dear, perhaps dearest, friend used to lay--you will remember those three significant days. The memory will most likely be painful, and leave an ache in your heart. As time passes the ache will come and go as it has a life of its own. You will both reject it and embrace it, and it may confuse you. If you reject it, it will depress you. If you embrace it, it will deepen you. Either way, it will still be an ache.
But there will be, I assure you, a fourth day when--along with the memory of your pet--and piercing through the heaviness in your heart--there will come a realization that belongs only to you. It will be as unique and strong as our relationship with each animal we have loved, and lost. This realization takes the form of a Living Love--like the heavenly scent of a rose that remains after the petals have wilted, this love will remain and grow--and be there for us to remember. It is a love we have earned. It is the legacy our pets leave us when they go. And it is a gift we may keep with us as long as we live. It is a love which is ours alone. And until we ourselves leave, perhaps to join our beloved pets--it is a love that we will always possess.
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Since you have gone the sun has left the sky, No breezes blow, No birds sing To ease the aching vacuum in my heart. I shall not forget your gentle ways; No judgements made, No difficult demands, No needs save one, To share your life with mine. Now kind, uncomprehending people say, "Cheer up, you'll love another pet some day." --Hilda Lunn
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Pet was never mourned as you, Purrer of the spotless hue, Plumy tail, and wistful gaze While you humoured our queer ways, Or outshrilled your morning call Up the stairs and through the hall-- Foot suspended in its fall-- While, expectant, you would stand Arched, to meet the stroking hand; Till your way you chose to wend Yonder, to your tragic end.
Never another pet for me! Let your place all vacant be; Better blankness day by day Than companion torn away. Better bid her memory fade, Better blot each mark she made, Selfishly escape distress By contrived forgetfulness, Than preserve her prints to make Every morn and eve an ache.
From the chair whereon she sat Sweep her fur, nor wince thereat; Rake her little pathways out Mid the bushes roundabout; Smooth away her talons' mark From the claw-worn pine-tree bark, Where she climbed as dusk embrowned, Waiting us who loitered round.
Strange it is this speechless thing Subject to our mastering, Subject for her life and food To our gift, and time, and mood; Timid pensioner of us Powers, Her existence ruled by ours, Should--by crossing at a breath Into safe and shielded death, By the merely taking hence Of her insignificance-- Loom as largened to the sense, Shape as part, above man's will, Of the Imperturbable.
As a prisoner, flight debarred, Exercising in a yard, Still retain I, troubled, shaken, Mean estate, by her forsaken; And this home, which scarcely took Impress from her little look, By her faring to the Far Grows all eloquent of her.
Housemate, I can think you still Bounding to the window-sill, Over which I vaguely see Your small mound beneath the tree, Showing in the autumn shade That you moulder where you played. --Thomas Hardy
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When humans die, they make a will To leave their homes, and all they Have to those they love. I too would make a will, if I could write. To some poor, wistful, lonely stray I'd leave my happy home, My dish, my cozy bed, my cushioned chair, my toy, The well-loved lap, The gently stroking hand, The loving voice, The place I made in someone's heart, The love, that at the last Could help me to a peaceful, painless end Held in loving arms. If I should die, Oh! Do not say: "No more a pet I'll have To grieve me by its loss." Seek out some lonely, unloved cat And give my place to him. This is my legacy, The love I leave behind, 'Tis all I have to give. --Margaret Trowton
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Is Heaven all you asked of it, O little cat? Did Peter fit A halo for your graceless head? Is there a quilt for your special bed, And a bowl of cream just out of reach Of your thieving paw? Or do They teach You not to steal in paradise? Does the flapping of Their wings entice? Do you scamper and swing on a golden fence, Or are They teaching you reverence? And are there really golden thrones Up there? Or do the Mighty Ones Have nice fat chairs that you can claw And tear and snag with an impious paw? And do the angels understand That a little cat in a lonely land Still longs for a kiss and a friendly cuff?
Celestial joys are not enough. Please, some small saint in shining white, Hold him close in your arms tonight. --Bianca Bradbury
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Dancing ribbons pushed by time Float through an old kitten's dreams. She chases them into eternity, And catches them, As they change into angels' wings. --Daryl Douglas Foyer
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CHOICES by Anne Kolaczyk
The little orange boy stopped. Behind him, kitties were playing, chasing each other and wrestling in the warm sunshine. It looked like so much fun, but in front of him, through the clear stillness of the pond's water, he could see his mommy. And she was crying.
He pawed at the water, trying to get at her, and when that didn't work, he jumped into the shallow water. All that got him was wet and Mommy's image danced away in the ripples. "Mommy!" he cried.
"Is something wrong?"
The little orange boy turned around. A lady was standing at the edge of the pond, her eyes sad but filled with love. The little orange boy sighed and walked out of the water. "There's been a mistake," he said. "I'm not supposed to be here." He looked back at the water. It was starting to still again and his mommy's image was coming back. "I'm just a baby. Mommy said it had to be a mistake. She said I wasn't supposed to come here yet."
The kind lady sighed and sat down on the grass. The little orange boy climbed into her lap. It wasn't Mommy's lap, but it was almost as good. When she started to pet him and scratch under his chin like he liked, he started to purr. He hadn't wanted to, but he couldn't help it. "I'm afraid there is no mistake. You are supposed to be here and your mommy knows it deep down in her heart," the lady said.
The little orange boy sighed and laid his head on the lady's leg. "But she's so sad. It hurts me to see her cry. And Daddy too."
"But they knew right from the beginning this would happen."
"That I was sick?" That surprised the little orange boy. No one had ever said anything and he had listened when they thought he was sleeping. All he had heard them talk about was how cute he was or how fast he was or how big he was getting.
"No, not that you were sick," the lady said. "But you see, they chose tears."
"No, they didn't," the little orange boy argued. Who would choose to cry?
The lady gently brushed the top of his head with a kiss. It made him feel safe and loved and warm--but he still worried about his mommy. "Let me tell you a story," the lady said.
The little orange boy looked up and saw other animals gathering around.
Cats--Big Boy and Snowball and Shamus and Abby and little Cleo and Robin. Merlin and Toby and Iggy and Zachary. Sweetie and Kamatte and Obie.
Dogs too--Sally and Baby and Morgan and Rocky and Belle. Even a lizard named Clyde and some rats named Saffron and Becky and a hamster named Odo. They all lay down near the kind lady and looked up at her, waiting.
She smiled at them and began:
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A long long time ago, the Loving Ones went to the Angel in Charge. They were lonesome and asked the angel to help them.
The angel took them to a wall of windows and let them look out the first window at all sorts of things--dolls and stuffed animals and cars and toys and sporting events.
"Here are things you can love," the angel said. "They will keep you from being lonesome."
"Oh, thank you," the Loving Ones said. "These are just what we need."
"You have chosen Pleasure," the angel told them.
But after a time the Loving Ones came back to the Angel in Charge. "Things are okay to love," they said. "But they don't care that we love them."
The Angel in Charge led them over to the second window. It looked out at all sorts of wild animals. "Here are animals to love," he said. "They will know you love them."
So the Loving Ones hurried out to care for the wild animals. "You have chosen Satisfaction," the angel said.
Some of the Loving Ones worked at zoos and wild animal preserves, some just had bird feeders in their yards, but after a time they all came back to the Angel in Charge.
"They know we love them," they told the angel. "But they don't love us back. We want to be loved in return."
So the angel took them to the third window and showed them lots of people walking around, hurrying places. "Here are people for you to love," the angel told them. So the Loving Ones hurried off to find other people to love. "You have chosen Commitment," the angel said.
But after a time a lot of Loving Ones came back to the Angel in Charge. "People were okay to love," they said. "But sometimes they stopped loving us and left. They broke our hearts."
The angel just shook his head. "I cannot help you," he said. "You will have to be satisfied with the choices I gave you."
As the Loving Ones were leaving, someone saw a window off to one side and hurried to look out. Through it, they could see puppies and kittens and dogs and cats and lizards and hamsters and ferrets. The other Loving Ones hurried over. "What about these?" they asked.
But the angel just tried to shoo them away. "Those are Personal Empathy Trainers," he said. "But there's a problem with their system operations."
"Would they know that we love them?" someone asked.
"Yes," the angel said.
"Would they love us back?" another asked.
"Yes," the angel said.
"Will they stop loving us?" someone else asked.
"No," the angel admitted. "They will love you forever."
"Then these are what we want," the Loving Ones said.
But the angel was very upset. "You don't understand," he told them. "You will have to feed these animals."
"That's all right," the Loving Ones said.
"You will have to clean up after them and take care of them forever."
"We don't care."
The Loving Ones did not listen. They went down to where the Pets were and picked them up, seeing the love in their own hearts reflected in the animals' eyes.
"They were not programmed right," the angel said. "We can't offer a warranty. We don't know how durable they are. Some of their systems malfunction very quickly, others last a long time."
But the Loving Ones did not care. They were holding the warm little bodies and finding their hearts so filled with love that they thought they would burst. "We will take our chances," they said.
"You do not understand." The angel tried one more time. "They are so dependent on you that even the most well-made of them is not designed to outlive you. You are destined to suffer their loss."
The Loving Ones looked at the sweetness in their arms and nodded. "That is how it should be. It is a fair trade for the love they offer."
The angel just watched them all go, shaking his head. "You have chosen Tears," he whispered.
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"So it is," the kind lady told the kitties. "And so each mommy and daddy knows. When they take a baby into their heart, they know that one day it will leave them and they will cry."
The little orange boy sat up. "So why do they take us in?" he asked.
"Because even a moment of your love is worth years of pain later."
"Oh." The little orange boy got off the lady's lap and went back to the edge of the pond. His mommy was still there, and still crying. "Will she ever stop crying?" he asked the kind lady.
She nodded. "You see, the Angel felt sorry for the Loving Ones, knowing how much they would suffer. He couldn't take the tears away but he made them special."
She dipped her hand into the pond and let the water trickle off her fingers. "He made them healing tears, formed from the special water here. Each tear holds bits of all the happy times of purring and petting and shared love. And the promise of love once again. As your mommy cries, she is healing.
"In time, she will be less sad and she will smile when she thinks of you. And then she will open her heart again to another little baby."
"But then she will cry again one day," the little orange boy said.
The lady just smiled at him as she got to her feet. "No, she will love again. That is all she will think about." She picked up Big Boy and Snowball and gave them hugs, then scratched Morgan's ear just how she liked.
"Look," she said. "The butterflies have come. Shall we go over to play?"
The other animals all ran ahead, but the little orange boy wasn't ready to leave his mommy. "Will I ever get to be with her again?"
The kind lady nodded. "You'll be in the eyes of every kitty she looks at. You'll be in the purr of every cat she pets. And late at night, when she's fast asleep, your spirit will snuggle up close to her and you both will feel at peace. One day soon, you can even send her a rainbow to tell her you're safe and waiting here for when it's her turn to come."
"I would like that," the little orange boy said and took one long look at his mommy. He saw her smile slightly through her tears and he knew she had remembered the time he almost fell into the bathtub.
"I love you, Mommy," he whispered. "It's okay if you cry." He glanced over at the others, running and playing and laughing with the butterflies. "Uh, Mommy? I gotta go play now, okay? But I'll be around, I promise."
Then he turned and raced after the others.
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Grieve not, nor speak of me with tears, but laugh and talk of me as if I were beside you... I loved you so-- 'twas Heaven here with you. --Isla Paschal Richardson
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Farewell, my friends, yet not farewell, Where I go you too shall dwell. I am gone before your face, A moment's time, a little space. When you come where I have stepped, You will wonder why you wept. --Edwin Arnold
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Do not stand at my grave and weep, I am not there, I do not sleep.
I am in a thousand winds that blow, I am the softly falling snow. I am the gentle showers of rain, I am the fields of ripening grain.
I am in the morning hush, I am in the graceful rush Of beautiful birds in circling flight, I am the starshine of the night.
I am in the flowers that bloom, I am in a quiet room, I am the birds that sing, I am in each lovely thing.
Do not stand at my grave and cry, I am not there. I do not die. --Mary K. Frye
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THE JOURNEY by Crystal Ward Kent
When you bring a pet into your life, you begin a journey--a journey that will bring you more love and devotion than you have ever known, yet also test your strength and courage.
If you allow, the journey will teach you many things, about life, about yourself, and most of all, about love. You will come away changed forever, for one soul cannot touch another without leaving its mark.
Along the way, you will learn much about savoring life's simple pleasures--jumping in leaves, snoozing in the sun, the joys of puddles, and even the satisfaction of a good scratch behind the ears.
If you spend much time outside, you will be taught how to truly experience every element, for no rock, leaf, or log will go unexamined, no rustling bush will be overlooked, and even the very air will be inhaled, pondered, and noted as being full of valuable information. Your pace may be slower except when heading home to the food dish--but you will become a better naturalist, having been taught by an expert in the field. Too many times we hike on automatic pilot, our goal being to complete the trail rather than enjoy the journey. We miss the details--the colorful mushrooms on the rotting log, the honeycomb in the old maple snag, the hawk feather caught on a twig. Once we walk as a dog does, we discover a whole new world. We stop; we browse the landscape, we kick over leaves, peek in tree holes, look up, down, all around. And we learn what any dog knows: that nature has created a marvelously complex world that is full of surprises, that each cycle of the seasons bring ever changing wonders, each day an essence all its own.
Even from indoors you will find yourself more attuned to the world around you. You will find yourself watching summer insects collecting on a screen or noting the flick and flash of fireflies through the dark. You will stop to observe the swirling dance of windblown leaves, or sniff the air after a rain. It does not matter that there is no objective in this; the point is in the doing, in not letting life's most important details slip by.
You will find yourself doing silly things that your pet-less friends might not understand: spending thirty minutes in the grocery aisle looking for the cat food brand your feline must have, buying dog birthday treats, or driving around the block an extra time because your pet enjoys the ride. You will roll in the snow, wrestle with chewy toys, bounce little rubber balls till your eyes cross, and even run around the house trailing your bathrobe tie--with a cat in hot pursuit--all in the name of love.
Your house will become muddier and hairier. You will wear less dark clothing and buy more lint rollers. You may find dog biscuits in your pocket or purse, and feel the need to explain that an old plastic shopping bag adorns your living room rug because your cat loves the crinkly sound.
You will learn the true measure of love--the steadfast, undying kind that says, "It doesn't matter where we are or what we do, or how life treats us as long as we are together." Respect this always. It is the most precious gift any living soul can give another. You will not find it often among the human race (so true!). And you will learn humility. The look in my dog's eyes often made me feel ashamed. Such joy and love at my presence. She saw not some flawed human who could be cross and stubborn, moody or rude, but only her wonderful companion. Or maybe she saw those things and dismissed them as mere human foibles, not worth considering, and so chose to love me anyway.
If you pay attention and learn well, when the journey is done, you will be not just a better person, but the person your pet always knew you to be, the one they were proud to call beloved friend.
I must caution you that this journey is not without pain. Like all paths of true love, the pain is part of loving. For as surely as the sun sets, one day your dear animal companion will follow a trail you cannot yet go down. And you will have to find the strength and love to let them go. A pet's time on earth is far too short--especially for those that love them. We borrow them, really, just for a while, and during these brief years they are generous enough to give us all their love, every inch of their spirit and heart, until one day there is nothing left. The cat that only yesterday was a kitten is all too soon old and frail and sleeping in the sun. The young pup of boundless energy wakes up stiff and lame, the muzzle now gray. Deep down we somehow always knew that this journey would end. We knew that if we gave our hearts they would be broken.
But give them we must for it is all they ask in return. When the time comes, and the road curves ahead to a place we cannot see, we give one final gift and let them run on ahead--young and whole once more. "Godspeed, good friend," we say, until our journey comes full circle and our paths cross again.
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Deep peace of the running wave to you. Deep peace of the flowing air to you. Deep peace of the quiet earth to you. Deep peace of the shining stars to you. Deep peace of the infinite peace to you. --adapted from Gaelic runes
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Aionía aftís e mnéme--May her memory be eternal. --from the Eastern Orthodox requiem service
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Warm summer sun Shine kindly here, Warm southern wind Blow softly here, Green sod above Lie light, lie light-- Good night, dear heart, Good night, good night. --Robert Richardson, adapted from his poem "Annette" in _Willow and Wattle_ (1893) by Samuel Langhorne Clemens (Mark Twain) as the epitaph for his daughter, Olivia Susan Clemens
Take care, Nicholas
Holly - 09 Feb 2005 19:23 GMT Oh now I have gone and ruined my makeup. Those poems were wonderful.
Sandra - 09 Feb 2005 19:54 GMT So sad to hear your news. Take comfort that your cat was one of the lucky ones that was loved and cared for. Try to remember all the good times she had with you.
 Signature Sandra
Rob Stearns - 09 Feb 2005 21:25 GMT My sincere thanks to you who took the time to write.....your warmth has helped more than you will know.
> Hi Y'all > Just wanted to share this with my friends and celebrate a life lived, in [quoted text clipped - 30 lines] > > Rob jacquie0 - 10 Feb 2005 05:40 GMT > My sincere thanks to you who took the time to write.....your warmth has > helped more than you will know. [quoted text clipped - 48 lines] >> >>Rob Allow me to add my deepest sympathies to those who have already done so. I too know the pain of losing a loved little furball. Read the following and I hope that it will help in some small way.
I Stood Beside Your Bed Last Night ---- A Poem from your pet that crossed over.
I stood by your bed last night, I came to have a peep. I could see that you were crying, You found it hard to sleep.
I whined to you softly as you brushed away a tear, "It's me, I haven't left you, I'm well, I'm fine, I'm here."
I was close to you at breakfast, I watched you pour the tea, You were thinking of the many times, your hands reached down to me.
I was with you at the shops today, Your arms were getting sore. I longed to take your parcels, I wish I could do more.
I was with you at my grave today, You tend it with such care. I want to reassure you, that I'm not lying there.
I walked with you towards the house, as you fumbled for your key. I gently put my paw on you, I smiled and said "It's me."
You looked so very tired, and sank into a chair. I tried so hard to let you know, that I was standing there.
It's possible for me, to be so near you everyday. To say to you with certainty, "I never went away."
You sat there very quietly, then smiled, I think you knew ... .....in the stillness of that evening, I was very close to you.
The day is nearly over... I smile and watch you yawning ... and say "Goodnight, God bless, I'll see you in the morning."
And when the time is right for you to cross the brief divide, I'll rush across to greet you and we'll stand side by side.
I have so many things to show you, there is so much for you to see. Be patient, live your journey out ... then come home to be with me.
Again, I'm so sorry for your loss.
Diana - 09 Feb 2005 23:23 GMT Rob Stearns at robster@shaw.ca wrote on2/9/05 10:52 AM:
> Hi Y'all > Just wanted to share this with my friends and celebrate a life lived, in > some small way Rob, allow me to lend my condolences to those you've already received. And my wish to celebrate her life as well. You write so movingly about her. Thanks for sharing. It helps all who have "been there" to witness in some small part the testimonies of others who have greatly loved.
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agent smith - 10 Feb 2005 02:21 GMT you have my deepest regards. everytime i see a thread like this, it makes me think of the time when my big guy will pass on. Man i cry everytime i see a thread like this because i know i will bawl like a baby when my big guy passes on. my deepest condolences.
-agent smith
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mlbriggs - 10 Feb 2005 06:08 GMT > Hi Y'all > Just wanted to share this with my friends and celebrate a life lived, in [quoted text clipped - 30 lines] > > Rob "
rise up slowly, Angel. It's hard to let you go...." sincere condolences. MLB
Erik - 10 Feb 2005 21:31 GMT My thoughts and prayers to you. When I lost my sweetie years ago, I remember my father telling me that my pain I am feeling is a direct reflection of the good times and joy we got from oneanother. I know it may not help, but I wanted to just let you know you are not alone. You gave your kitty love, joy and so much more than so many others have. You made a difference and you made your kitty a special and blessed one. From my heart, my best wishes and sincere condolences.
Erik
>> Hi Y'all >> Just wanted to share this with my friends and celebrate a life lived, in [quoted text clipped - 44 lines] > rise up slowly, Angel. It's hard to let you go...." > sincere condolences. MLB
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