Life is busy and things, important things, are often
overlooked in the midst of the frantic day to day activities.
"Things," like a dog who lives outside on the end of a
chain.
The dog who sometimes is thrown a bit of food, and occasionally
gets some water.
The dog who exists in a life of utter loneliness and neglect.
That dog, who day after day, week after week, year after year,
is in the same place, can become part of the landscape - easy to overlook, easy
to forget.
One dog, named "Harvey," suffered this pitiful
existence.
This week, someone called animal control to let them know about
a dog who was chained up in the backyard of a house.
The dog was in the dirt, he had fallen and was unable to stand.
It turns out that his "family," a term too kind to use
because it somehow implies that there should be a semblance of caring, had
moved away and left him where he had been chained for years.
Those people left him without food, water or shelter.
They left their fourteen year old dog to die alone.
The dog, covered in fleas, dirt and maggots, was in pain and
suffering.
But in his last moments, he was not alone - for the first time
in his life, he was touched by the hand of someone who cared.
She writes of those final moments:
I
named him ♥ Harvey ♥ and stood by his side while he took his last breath and
petted him and told him what a good boy he was and that he would no longer be
neglected or suffer. He looked at me with such pretty brown eyes as to say
“thank you” and then he was gone.
Life is busy, but it is crucial that everyone remain vigilant to
what is happening around them.
Harvey is not the only dog who was forced to live a torturous
life on a chain.
Whoever finally picked up the phone to call the authorities
likely did not notice that no one was coming out to give the long-neglected dog
food, or water.
Whoever that person was, had likely grown used to the sad dog
that sat in the back yard of a house.
All the while, Harvey suffered, while nobody was paying
attention.
Rest in Peace Harvey.
·
DECEMBER 11,
2012
·
BY: PENNY EIMS
I am human, if you see a typo, please let me know. Questions,
comments or story ideas can be emailed to Eims1@live.com.
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