"It's the
Circle of Life
And it
moves us all
Through
despair and hope
Through
faith and love
Till we
find our place
On the
path unwinding
In the
Circle
The
Circle of Life"
We adopted Simba along with Penny in April 2003. We paid a visit to the kitty sanctuary, The
Pat Brody Shelter, with the mission of getting one short-haired cat as a family
pet. As we made our way through the
visiting room with dozens of cats, I turned to discover my oldest child, then
five years old, literally making out with a long-haired calico cat named
Penny. Their faces rubbed against each
other, their bodies smushed into each other and it was love at first sight. As my husband and I watched this love affair
blossom, I quietly muttered that from my previous online research of the
shelter, I believed that Penny was one of a pair of cats that had to be adopted
together. Yikes.
I asked to see the other cat that belonged with Penny. I was escorted to the kitty infirmary because
I was informed that Simba had a cold.
Upon approaching the large cage, I was instantly greeted with sniffly
love and affection from a beautiful butterscotch colored lion. In between sneezes, Simba melted my heart and
yes, it was love at first sight but this time for me.
We went home with not one short-haired, young cat – but instead
two long-haired beauties: Penny was
twelve and Simba was eight. Riley, my
daughter, was newly five and Jake, my son, was two. Our family was then complete.
The cats were instantly a hit with the family, acclimating
instantly and claiming our home as their own.
Both Penny and Simba were very social and integrated themselves into our
myriad of activities at home. Sadly, in
September 2006, Penny died from breast cancer.
We found a lump near one of her nipples when I was giving her a shave
down in the hot month of August. A visit
to the vet revealed a tumor, which had already spread to her lungs, her bones
and was starting on her brain. At
fifteen years of age, coupled with the amount of metastasis, we chose to let
nature take its course.
One day, Penny did not return home. We had to explain to our than eight year old
and then five year old, that sometimes, when cats know they are dying, they
disappear to die privately. The message
was not well received and Riley spent three days crying when her beloved cat
did not come home. We assumed the worst
and tried to help our daughter with the devastating life lesson, the circle of
life.
The pain grew as Riley was relentless in checking Penny’s
bush – a beautiful white hydrangea bush that Penny spent a great many hours
lounging underneath. Imagine the excruciating
call I received at work one afternoon from a hysterical child who found her
beloved cat, dead, underneath her favorite bush. Penny had returned home to die and knew where
we would find her.
Now seven years later, at the age of fifteen, the agony has
returned as we ponder Simba’s whereabouts.
Has he gone off to pass away? Did
he just spend the night under our neighbor’s porch since we were at a soccer
game late and unable to let him in?
Simba’s health has been declining rapidly: he’s lost a great deal of weight, his vision
is very poor, his hearing is not all there, his appetite has been waning, his
arthritic body has been increasingly difficult for him to move around. My husband and I have been discussing in
recent days when is the right time to make the decision – we do not want our
beloved cat to suffer; but when IS that “right” time.
Our memories surge:
the cat that was more dog-like in nature; the cat that followed his
beloved Riley ON TO the school bus (yes, he climbed up the steps behind her and
had to be taken off by her); the cat that ran up the street alongside of Riley on her bike,
as her dad let go for the first time without training wheels; the cat
that would sit bum to bum to bum as Riley and her dad sat on the curb watching
traffic go by; the cat that would come running like a dog when called and as
Riley puts it, “the cat that has been with me through EVERYTHING.”
Simba was the source of comfort for Riley as she watched her
mother battle breast cancer. Every time
the uncontrolled chemo-induced vomiting would surface, Riley found comfort by stroking her
buddy’s fur. When Riley was bullied in
elementary school, that big fluffy guy knew when to sit in her lap and purr her
to a happy place. When Riley’s
grandparents were ill and times were tough in our household (we all lived together),
Riley found comfort in sleep with that big lion cuddling her backside - he literally had her back. When Riley’s grandparents subsequently passed
away, again, the long-haired, orange guy was there for her when she needed him
the most.
While not to leave out my other two children, my husband nor
myself, as we are all heavily grieving for the fear of what may be in Simba’s
absence; the relationship between a girl and her cat is just profound. She loved him through every vein in her body
and his love for her was reciprocal.
Simba certainly had a fondness for my husband, but it was his girl that
stole his heart.
My tears flow as I struggle with helping my family to cope
with this dilemma. Part of me hopes that
Simba has gone on to pass privately – I do not want my family to see his
lifeless body and I despair having to make the choice for euthanasia. However, the other part of me hopes he comes
home to die – so we have that closure, so we may say our goodbyes to our
beloved family member properly.
Lives are born and love is grown. Lives pass on, but the love becomes embedded
into the very being of who we are. The
pain never goes away, but it does ease with time.
Please Simba, come home to your family.
"It's the
Circle of Life
And it
moves us all
Through
despair and hope
Through
faith and love
Till we
find our place
On the
path unwinding
In the
Circle
The
Circle of Life"
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