Nellie and her mom sat on
the couch after church, as they had hundreds of times before, but today was
different. It was the last time.
The week before Nellie
had taken ill. She had trouble peeing. When this occurs a parent’s mind goes to
the simplest solution, an easily treated bladder infection.
But, when the diagnosis
was made, it was both the furthest thing from Momma Lea’s mind, and the one she
feared the most: Bladder cancer.
At Nellie’s age there was
no treatment, and, since humans are more humane with dogs than they are to themselves,
arrangements were made for the one who would guide Nellie to the Bridge would
do so from her living room, so she could peacefully slip away next to her mom.
Nellis lay next to her
mom, softly snoring, at peace, knowing her job on the mortal side was done, and
she had done it perfectly. Her mom was anxious, listening to her, each breath
sounding like the click of a minute hand counting down to permanent midnight.
When humans begin school,
the first thing teachers do, unintentionally, is rob children of their ability
to see magic. Being an adult human is hard, and there is no room for magic. When
it happens, the human mind lies to the soul, telling it a logical fib wiping
the magic away.
Momma Lea will tell you a
vet came to her home, gave Nellie the final shot, and let her slip away to the
Bridge.
It was the lie her brain
told head.
It is sad, because what
happened was so much more comforting.
Momma Lea fell asleep
next to Nellie. When she was stirred awake she had dogs on either side of her.
Sandy, her heart dog, had returned to help Nellie transition to the Immortal
side.
Nellie sat on her mom’s
lap and gave her a thousand kisses, then revealed the truth, which one does at
the end, and spoke to Momma Lea, thanking her for everything she did, for being
the best mom she could hope for, and for making every day of her life an
indescribable pleasure. Momma Lea told Nellie that she had been a fantastic
child, and Lea had no idea how she would go on, but vowed she would, for the
sake of her angels.
Sandy sat in her mom’s
lap again. He fit perfectly. There were kisses, tears, and words of love that reached
across the River of Life to fill her heart in a way it hadn’t been since Sandy
had last patted around their Kentucky home.
Then came the final but
not permanent goodbye which I cannot recount here because it was too powerful
for any language except the forgotten Elven.
Then, paw and paw, Nellie
followed Sandy’s steps to the Bridge, where she was met with so much love it
blew her ears back.
As that
happened Lea’s mind told her a lie, that the vet who helped her baby would go
to her true forever home.
The
entire incident was wiped away, except in dreams, and a nugget of what happened
that stayed with Lea.
That,
at the end of this hard life, is a place where all the love she had given she
will get back the day she passes.
It is
in Sandy, Nellie, and others she had lost.
The
brain allows that secret, and the beauty awaiting all humans at the end of
their journey.
It is
the only thing that can keep a human moving forward in this wicked world.
what a beautiful tribute to Nellie brought tears to my eyes sending her mommy Leah lots of hugs Dallas and Belle Lawson
ReplyDeleteSweet Nellie, that was such a loving temporary goodbye.
ReplyDeleteSuch a beautiful and moving tribute, the tears are streaming down my cheeks with this tender goodbye. Gentle thoughts of comfort until you meet again. π
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely beautiful ππππΎπΎπΎπππ
ReplyDeleteRun free, friend Nellie. You will be missed.
ReplyDeleteWhat a loving sweet goodbye...for now.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful story about Lea, Nellie and her love for animalsπ
ReplyDelete