We met Simba and Kali one afternoon on a smallish compound a
few clicks down from the American Club in Kampala. Jeff found the notice on the
advert board at the American Club and called immediately.
Two Rhodesian Ridgebacks, about a year old, were in need of
a new home.
Jeff went quickly to meet the dogs and arranged an interview
with their owner on the following day. We went as a family for the interview
during which our animal ethics and ability to care for such fine animals were
analyzed thoroughly.
These animals were incredibly well loved from day one. They would
not be allowed to just anyone.
We learned all about their medical history. Simba (the male)
had been ill early in his first year of life receiving intense therapy and
overcoming the illness completely. His sister Kali, the more energetic of the
two, had a great health record and a very strong build. They were most
definitely a pair—together since birth—and very doting of each other.
We fell in love immediately.
The previous owner was concerned about the ages of our
children as the dogs, very large and strong, had never played around little
ones. Our Silas was four at the time and Isaac was six but the dogs and all of
our children bonded quickly. Our kids were not afraid and the dogs warmed up to
them in no time.
After much discussion, the owner decided we would be the
best home for the dogs. We were ecstatic.
Jeff had the dogs delivered from Kampala in the back of our
Hilux pickup. They reached our home late in the night. I took the dogs to our
lower yard while Jeff prepared their space and blankets. Our children were
already in bed, so that left me to entertain the two (VERY LARGE) animals that
I didn’t know well yet. On the stairs leading to the yard that stretches below
our house, I introduced myself to Simba and Kali and found my heart completely
stolen as they both leaned their bodies into my legs and allowed me to pet and
cuddle them. Like a giant hug.
Simba gave much space to Kali who was the most
pushy of the two, but when Kali would wander off to sniff her new territory,
Simba would somberly find his way to my side and gently raise his paw.
I shook his outreached paw that first time only to have him
insist on my holding the paw for an extended time.
Simba did not want to simply shake. He wanted to hold hands.
We experienced this with Simba every day. Any time one of us
would sit in the yard Simba would find his way to us and rest his very large
paw on top of our hand. One evening as I watched the sun set over the mountains
Simba sat beside me with his paw on my hand until the sky went dark.
He was happiest when we were holding his paw.
He was my walking buddy. In the evenings as I prepared
dinner, he would come to the kitchen door and stick just his nose inside the
door. He wasn’t allowed in the kitchen and he never disobeyed this, but his
nose in the back door signified that it was 6pm and time to walk. Like clock
work, Simba was ready to accompany me. He was my every-single-day friend.
Simba stoically kept watch as I marked off the miles in our
yard. He would most often plant himself in the middle of my path with paw up
until I took (and held) his paw for a moment. He made me laugh every time. He
made me feel cared for.
In the months last year that I was so ill, 6pm would find
Simba at the kitchen door laying and waiting every single evening. He never
failed. Occasionally he would even ‘talk’ to us inside to let me know he was
waiting. Jeff would explain that I was sick, but Simba would show up there
anyway. He was so happy when I was well enough to walk again.
Simba loved all of us but Si was easily his favorite. (Silas
is Kali’s favorite too. We’ve all just decided to accept this:)) Si, notorious
in our family as the nap-evader when he was young, would nap with the dogs on
the porch if he ever napped at all. And when the dogs were wrestling with each
other, Si could be in the middle of them and they would never harm him. Si was
fearless. When he was little he would often try to ride the dogs. Kali grew
tired of that behavior and refused to comply but Simba would always concede as
horse to Si’s cowboy game. They had a beautiful bond. A bond strengthened over
the last seven years. Si doesn’t play cowboy anymore, but he is still the
favorite.
(Simba on the left, Kali on the right)
:)
Each member of our family has countless stories of Simba’s
somber love and care for them. Moments of loneliness or struggle or heartbreak
or anger. Simba could be counted on to find us, lay his paw on our hand and
wait with us until the bad feeling passed. He has chased thieves, patrolled our
home diligently anytime Jeff was away and he has even served as evangelist. The
vet who cared for him over the last weeks wrote that witnessing our family and
Simba’s love had encouraged him to get his spiritual life in order.
Simba has been a gift.
When we arrived back in Uganda several weeks ago from
furlough we found Kali and Simba struggling. They had both been ill just before
our return and the treatment by our trusted vet from Kampala had helped Kali.
Simba, on the other hand, was not getting well.
Our hearts were broken to see him so sick. We kept the vet on
a weekly visit rotation and we managed the daily care. Jeff ran IVs, gave
injections and held on to every hope. I managed the oral meds and spoon feeding
when Simba refused to eat. The kids kept constant vigil.
We prayed.
One week ago Simba lost the use of his back legs. We made
his bed in our front room and the vet made another trip to provide pain meds
and another round of antibiotics.
We were determined to fight for life.
There were hopeful moments when Simba seemed more
responsive, but yesterday about midday he took a turn for the worse.
We all spent the day caring for Simba sitting by his side
and whispering love all around him.
He, of course, wanted us to hold his paw.
He breathed his last at 1:35AM.
Alex and I were with him. Jeff came immediately and tried to
give him every opportunity to breathe, but Simba was gone.
He departed strong and loving, just as he always had been.
Death is raw in this place we live. All death.
Jeff and the boys dressed in boots and work gloves and went
to the yard in the early morning dark to begin to dig a hole. I cleaned Simba’s
space. We all cried over him and whispered last words of thanks and love.
We buried him in my walking yard. In that place where he
reminded me every day that I was loved.
The last seven years have been somewhat isolated for our
family in different ways than before.
Kali and Simba needed a new home years ago, but gracious,
the Cash family would also so desperately need them.
In our last season, those dogs, those animals have loved us
so faithfully and so very well.
A reminder to us daily that God knows what we need and
provides it ahead of time.
A reminder that we are known and adored.
We had no idea on that day we met the dogs what was about to
transpire in our Fort Portal world.
We simply thought Kali and Simba were cool dogs.
They would also be faithful and stalwart friends.
In the wake of so many painful world events and understanding
that many families are grieving the tragic loss of human life, we humbly offer
our loss into that midst.
We join the prayers for all who grieve today. We join the prayers
for peace.
And we pray for the courage to see the ordinary miracles in
our day to day getting us through even the darkest valleys.
Simba was one such miracle to our family.
We will always be grateful.
"The earth is the Lord's and everything in it, the world and all who live in it;" Psalm 24:1
1 comment:
I never met Simba, but I feel the sting of his passing. May the aches you feel remind you of his friendship. I'm convinced that the depth of grief you feel at his death is directly related to the joy and friendship you shared in his life.
Sleep in peace, our 4-legged friend.
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