Are our lives predestined
for us and whatever happens does so for a reason? Are some events just meant to be destiny?
These are my
reflections as I think about Xanthe.
Some of you who followed my earlier blogs Call the midwife - Hell, not her! and You've got to be kidding! may have wondered how Xanthe my baby goat was fairing.
Some of you who followed my earlier blogs Call the midwife - Hell, not her! and You've got to be kidding! may have wondered how Xanthe my baby goat was fairing.
It has taken quite awhile for me to be able to write this and then sort through
photos to accompany this post without dissolving into tears and putting it
aside.
I have to console myself with perhaps she just wasn’t meant to be, even though I had a darn good crack at keeping her on this earthly coil.
On that dark
windy night of her birth if I hadn’t helped bring her into the world she would
have died.
Within an hour
of Xanthe’s birth hyperthermia tried its best to kill her. As I frantically rubbed her in front of the heater I kept saying “Come on bubba you
can do it, stay with me.” And she did.
If I hadn’t
noticed the following morning she was temporarily birth blind her mother would
have abandoned her resulting in her death.
Surely that
was three strikes destiny is out?
Xanthe was 9
weeks old, robust and healthy when destiny, if that is what rules us, had
another idea to take her from me.
Xanthe needed to learn to be a goat and
socialise with the other kids and to become independent from me. I would
take her into the paddock for play dates with the other kids watching her fly
up and down our dirt hill with joyous abandon and interacting with the other
babies.
Slowly I left her
for longer periods, calling her back for her meals and for bed in the evening,
although more often she would stand at the back gate and yell for me when it
was getting toward meal time.
One night after
her bottle of milk she decided she wanted to sleep in the paddock with the
other goats, refusing to come back to the house with me. Well
you can imagine my angst. I was out at the crack of dawn checking on her but
she was fine. It was a step in the right
direction to independence for her.
Xanthe loved cuddling up close to me after her bottles.
But she didn’t have a mother in the paddock to protect her. I never dreamt she could be so badly hurt by one of the does.
Xanthe must have ventured too close to a doe, posing a threat in that doe's mind or she was simply in her way. I ask what kind of threat can a little baby possibly pose? To me it is all so senseless and unfair.
It helps to think of all my beloved pets who have died as bright shining stars, I can look up into the night sky and still feel they are with me. There are also many 'Rainbow' poems and letters to express our heartfelt loss of a pet. This is one I modified, I am sure the original author, unknown, would not mind.
A letter from across The Rainbow Bridge
Hi Mum,
Now that I’ve
been across The Rainbow Bridge for a couple of weeks, they said I should write
a letter home. Sorry mum, but I’m so
busy ‘across the bridge’ that I haven’t thought of home much. They said it’s
okay and that you would understand. I
hope you do. (I think you will.)
Remember that day
when I was in a lot of pain and not feeling well and you were crying? I don’t remember much, but I do remember
seeing and hearing you and feeling your touches and hugs....I remember hearing “I
love you” and that one last command of “Go through”. I didn’t know what you
meant, so I turned around and walked through the fog that was in front of
me. I saw the biggest bridge I’ve ever
seen! And so many friends on the other side of it! They were all playing in a
big beautiful paddock! You were right to
tell me to go there!
My feet kept
moving forward, but my heart kept pulling me back. Your touches became lighter and lighter and I
wanted to come back and nudge your hands for more love, but I was overcome by
this feeling of curiosity for the happy place over the bridge! My feet started moving on their own, like a
gentle breeze was moving them forward for me!
I can’t explain it, but I had no doubt that it was the right thing to
do!
So I walked
across that big bridge by myself. I looked for you, because you’re always by my
side, walking with me, but this was different. Even though you weren’t there
with me, I never felt alone! I actually felt like I had a huge cape of love
wrapped around my body and the more I walked, the easier it was to breathe and
my pain was gone. So I kept walking! And I would feel more warmth in the big
hug, so I kept walking! I eventually made it over the bridge – I did it by
myself mum! When I got there all of my new friends greeted me and helped me
walk off the bridge ~ it was so cool!
They gave me a pair of wings and we all have Forever People to watch
over ~ that’s YOU mum! You’re my Forever Person and I’m your Forever Goat! We
had such a great life together and I do miss you a LOT, but please know that I
am happy in my new home across The Bridge!
I’ll send you another Earth Angel so you won’t be alone. Give your whole heart, like you gave it to me. I’ll check in every so often to make sure they treasure your love ~ I always did! When you miss me, think of a rainbow and know I’m on the other side of it, waiting to walk with you again. I’ll always be in your heart. I love you mum! Time for me to go play......
I’ll send you another Earth Angel so you won’t be alone. Give your whole heart, like you gave it to me. I’ll check in every so often to make sure they treasure your love ~ I always did! When you miss me, think of a rainbow and know I’m on the other side of it, waiting to walk with you again. I’ll always be in your heart. I love you mum! Time for me to go play......
Here I am.....see
me!!
Xanthe 11th October 2015 - 16th December 2015
It had been a difficult few months for me, not only did I lose Xanthe, my beautiful paddock buddy Otis finally succumbed to urinary calculi, which we had been battling for 5 years and Crusher my faithful farm cat was accidentally run over in front of me.
I came across a great article on Psych Central Grieving the loss of a pet, it certainly helped me sort through and understand my feelings. Healthy grieving is getting "through", not over, a loss.
I came across a great article on Psych Central Grieving the loss of a pet, it certainly helped me sort through and understand my feelings. Healthy grieving is getting "through", not over, a loss.
Otis 1st December 2007 - 22nd October 2015
Crusher Puss adopted us. She turned up at Easter 2006 and decided I was to be her new human. I think feeding her scotch fillet steak that first night sealed the deal. It became obvious she had been kicked a lot at her old home, she had such attitude until she learnt she could trust her new humans. I have no idea how old she was, she was at least a few years old in 2006 and she was with us for 9 years. She loved curling up in my lap at any chance she got. I am so glad she chose to live with me.
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