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.(How bizarre they are!
How many kinds there are!), 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 chewie 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.
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 awhile, 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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