|
Just this side of heaven is a place called Rainbow Bridge.
When an animal dies that has been especially close to someone here, that pet goes to Rainbow Bridge.
There are meadows and hills for all of our special friends so they can run and play together.
There is plenty of food, water and sunshine, and our friends are warm and comfortable.
All the animals who had been ill and old are restored to health and vigor; those who were hurt or maimed are made whole and strong again, just as we remember them in our dreams of days and times gone by.
The animals are happy and content, except for one small thing; they each miss someone very special to them, who had to be left behind.
They all run and play together, but the day comes when one suddenly stops and looks into the distance. His bright eyes are intent; His eager body quivers. Suddenly he begins to run from the group, flying over the green grass, his legs carrying him faster and faster.
You have been spotted, and when you and your special friend finally meet, you cling together in joyous reunion, never to be parted again. The happy kisses rain upon your face; your hands again caress the beloved head, and you look once more into the trusting eyes of your pet, so long gone from your life but never absent from your heart.
Then you cross Rainbow Bridge together....
Author unknown...
 |
Chamtippy Timone
(Timmy)
15th April 2003-29th September 2003
Victim of a Road Traffic Accident.
Timmy was a cuddly cat
who on your lap he always sat.
Snuggling in and rubbing noses
or dashing through all mummies roses.
Climbing, leaping,rushing about,
but always returning to our shout.
Maybe food was being served
he was sure that he deserved,
freedom to sample every plate
and choose that which he ate.
Cat food would do to fill any spaces,
before he found Toby in bed, his favorite place,
there to snuggle in tight
and if not discovered, to spend the night.
Sept 29th 2003
by Alison Peebles.
|
 |
Chamtippy Ritzy
(Lulu)
17th December 2003-October 2004
Victim of a Road Traffic Accident
|
|
|
CHOICES:
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
mummy. 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 Mummy's
image danced
away in the ripples. "Mummy!" 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 mummy's image
was coming
back. "I'm just a baby. Mummy 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 Mummy's lap, but it was almost as good. When
she started
to pet him and scritch 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 mummy
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 mummy. "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: 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 gardens, 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.
"So it is," the kind lady told the kitties. "And so each mummy 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 mummy 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 mummy cries, she is healing. "It
may take a
long while, but the tears will help her feel better. 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
mummy. "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
mummy. 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, Mummy," he whispered. "It's okay if you cry." He
glanced over at
the others, running and playing and laughing with the
butterflies. "Uh, Mummy?
I've got to go and play now, okay? But I'll be around, I promise."
Then he
turned and raced after the others.
|