He arrived here 15 years ago on a stormy night in November. Blue was a puppy and she sounded the alarm – CAT IN DISTRESS!!! Outside high in the branches of a hawthorn tree was perched a ginger cat meowing for help. Once inside the house he quickly settled down to eat and sleep and never left again.
Many people have known and loved him, seen him for the special soul that he was and come to pay homage. One friend named him the Dalai De Mandolin. Like all beloved creatures he had many secret names, whispered into his soft red fur as he purred his pleasure and gave back love.
He never scratched or hurt a human. He could attack an invading dog or cat but when two new kittens joined the household 12 years ago he allowed himself one soft growl and then took them under his wing. He had always been a rabbit hunter and with two more mouths to feed and young ones to initiate, his daily kills trebled in number. We had to fit new doors to the porch to avoid waking every morning to more gory gifts.
Today he lay in peaceful calm and took his last journey asking only for our companionship. He didn’t need help – he knew what to do and a couple of hours after padding into a dark and cool clothes cupboard, he was gone.
A writer called Derek Tangye used to live near my house in Cornwall and he once told me that when big changes are happening in your life, sometimes your animals chose not to come with you along the new road. He believed that they know when is the time to arrive and when to leave. and if we trust them and don’t get in their way, they will follow their instincts quite naturally.
So here I am, in my empty zen house, preparing to move my life south to Catalunya, and saying goodbye and thank you to a great lion of a cat whose spirit is now roaming free. Who knows where he will turn up next or who he will be? Dandelion – I will be looking out for you.
(Visited 43 time, 1 visit today)
Oh Kate, I’m so sorry. Glad you were home with him. Such beautiful photos you’ve shared…..and I remember his big gentle presence when visiting. Go gently.
Diana x
Kate, I just left a message on FB in response to THAT post. Now, having read more about Dandelion I feel your loss even deeper. I agree with the friend that felt he might be moving on in response to your own “moving on”. You lived your purpose together and is he left peacefully I hope you find some grace in that. Of course there are still tears, grieving for much – his warmth, kindness, comfort. But I hope you do not allow yourself to wallow in any guilt about your decision to move. If I have my own intuition on target, I will say that you both “knew” long ago how your relationship might part ways this time. And yes, I am sure that you will find each other again. And then you will know and both be comforted again with the cycles of what we call with impudence “life and death” all the while knowing that there really is no such thing. In the mean time, until we all reach that level, I send you my most heartfelt hugs and love. Weeping with you over your loss of tangible spirit. It is so hard to carry on without the physical for us – for Dandelion he has not such boundaries and he still loves, especially you. OK, I am going to go and have a nice little cry by myself now.
What a lovely eulogy for a lovely cat.
I am so sorry and so saddened.
Hang in there.
O
Aw sorry. That’s really so sad, he was so cute 🙁
And I love the picture of a round cat in a square box. Cats can be accommodating when they want to be.
Dandelion was a very wise cat. I meat him this last years, and I thought he was ready to become a angel-cat, he was in the summum of his evolution. We will have nice thoughts about you Dandy!!