I’ve always loved animals. Even when
I was a little girl, I’d beg my parents to get me a dog, but we couldn’t take
care of one, so I had to think of some other animal I could keep as a pet.
I had a number of pets growing up,
such as a goldfish or rabbits but they would come and go within a month. None
of them stayed long enough to have a place in my heart. None of them except
Chicky. I was 12 when we got her. She was a bird, a cockatiel with a little
mohawk of feathers and was pale yellow all over. She had 2 orange dots on her
cheeks and pretty eyes. She came in a pair with another cockatiel, Ricky. They
both were beautiful and I took great care of them. But after a month or so, I
noticed that something wasn’t right with Ricky. He was tired and lethargic and
wouldn’t eat. We took him to the vet, and she prescribed some vitamins for him.
But unfortunately, Ricky passed away that night. I was heartbroken. Ricky was
the most gentle bird I’d seen and it felt cruel for such a kind soul to be
whisked away from me. Chicky, on the other hand, was a feisty bird. She would
bite me and glare at me, which made me wish she was the one who had died, and
not Ricky.
Who would have known that I’d take
back those words in a few months?
For the first few days I treated
Chicky like a murderer. I blamed her for Ricky’s death. But slowly I started
accepting her as my bird.
I would hear her chirp and dance
during the day, then huddle in a corner at night. I would treat her with bits
of broccoli, coriander and baby corn. She became the joy of my life.
Last year, in September, during the
term exams, we had to take Chicky to the vet. Nothing to worry about, we just
had to get her nails trimmed. It was nothing new for us, we had taken her a few
times before. This time, however, I couldn’t come as I has to study for my
exam. So my parents took her.
They returned after an hour. I
rushed to see Chicky. But instead I was greeted by an empty cage. Shocked, I
asked Abba where she was. He said she had flown away.
I felt as if the air had been
knocked out of my lungs. I couldn’t believe it. Surely Chicky wouldn’t abandon
me? I cried and cried for her, wishing that she would somehow find her way back
home to me. Mama saw my state and came to me. She said that Chicky hadn’t flown
away.
My hopes raised for a second, only
to be crushed by her next words. Chicky was dead.
She’d been chocked by the vet while
he was cutting her nails. Grief, anger and sorrow took over me. I was kicking,
screaming and sobbing. Nothing could console me.
That day, I realized 2 things which
changed my world.
One, that life is unfair. There are
no rules in life. Anything that can happen, will happen. There’s no use of
moping around. Humans aren’t flawless. The only thing we can do about such
injustices is to fight for what we believe in and remember those left behind.
And two, that death is inevitable.
Every creature will die eventually. Which is why it’s important to live life to
the fullest and grab every opportunity that comes. We only have 1 life to make
a difference. Make it count.
And I did exactly that.
A few days after her death, I wrote
some poems about Chicky, which made me pursue writing as a hobby. I started to
love penning down my thoughts, my imagination. And it all paid off when my
short story got published in a book by Scholastic.
Chicky inspired me, directly or
indirectly, to go after the things that I love and care about. She helped me
find my passion. She made me value the time I have on Earth.
I’m telling the truth. Believe it or not
but this story is indeed true!
Now it all started on October 15th 2015. I woke up to find out a tiny little pigeon egg in my rather quiet balcony. I live on the 12th floor and was not able to see birds that often in our balcony. But since I started scattering birdseeds, birds become regular visitors. But surely I wasn’t expecting an egg!
I hid behind the curtain as I saw the mother pigeon suddenly appearing and gently sitting on the egg which was in a flower pot. I saw my Abba (father) coming so I told him ‘’ Look a pigeon egg!” I wondered how would he react. He said, ‘’We surely are blessed to get such an egg in our balcony.”
But who knew that this blessing will turn out to be a heartbreak in disguise.
I wonder sometimes,
While eating sour limes,
What we would do;
If the water we have been using,
Ceases to flow forever!
Would I never,
Be able to take a shower?
I often think,
While skating in a rink;
What If our beautiful Earth,
The place of birth,
Of you and me;
May not have a single tree,
As long as the eye can see?
I have a million questions,
But alas! I can’t find their solutions,
Please! Fellow humans think about the future,
Or else we will destroy mother nature,
Let us join hands together,
To save our common mother,
Together we shall overcome
We shall overcome someday !