Funny, how we never seem to know what's just around the corner. We
go about our lives: working, laughing, loving . . . and we never know
how our life is going to turn out. I know this doesn't sound like the
goal-oriented thinkers that I encourage people to be. I encourage
animal lovers to be their best and to reach as high as they possibly
can. After all, if we don't reach for the stars, how can we ever touch
them? Yes, I know . . . Childish words ....
Maybe it's the moody weather outside as I'm writing this, here in
Michigan, on a horse farm that has seen better days and certainly has
its woes ... maybe, for just a while, as I look at broken fences and
barns begging for paint, I know how much we need those hopes and
dreams I'm always talking about. That's when I turn on the radio.
I let the music play as we're getting ready for a show. Not just
any show, but a show that's become important to everybody around here.
What's so important about it this time? This time, it's important just
to be there. It's important to let everyone see that we're still in
the game. It's important for us, ourselves, to know we're still in the
game, I think to myself, as the music plays.
Animal lovers are very different from other people. When life
throws road blocks at us, we can't stop and pity ourselves if it's
taking longer now to get where we want to go. Unlike our friends, we
don't have that luxury. Yes, of course, we can pull over and pity
ourselves for a while. But, we can't do it for long. We can't pity
ourselves for long because we've got other lives depending on us.
Maybe it's just a puppy or a kitten. Maybe it's a horse. Maybe
it's a whole kennel or a cattery or an aviary or a farm. The point is:
The show can only go on if we get out of bed in the morning, put one
foot in front of the other, and do whatever we have to do to keep the
bills paid and the animals fed.
Animal lovers are people with big hearts. Sometimes, those hearts
are too big for our own good. It doesn't matter how late we stayed up
last night, reading or watching TV or talking on the phone until we
fell asleep ... it doesn't matter how long we stayed out ... it doesn't
matter what we thought, or said, or dreamed last night.
Do you hear the rooster crowing? It's time to get up again ... time
to make eggs and pancakes ... time to pour some coffee. What matters is
that we get up, feed our pets and all the rest of the animals that
depend on us. What matters is that we sing to the radio and fill the
place with music all the way from the floor to the rafters and out
every window into the world around us.
Animals like music. They like the sound and the feeling of it. They
like the way music goes through their skin and all the way into their
soul and they are very true about what they like to hear. Sometimes,
they like soft music; other times, they like a great symphony. As a
singer, I know the best songs are ones that animals like to hear. I've
heard of singers letting their animals pick the songs they record in
the studio. I'm one of those singers. Of the many songs I've recorded
over the years, the most successful were the ones my animals liked
best. "I Wish You Love" was one of those songs.
Funny, how music fills us with emotion ... Funny, how our animals do
the same thing ... Why is that?
I don't know. I don't know the answer to that any more than I know
the answer to the mystery that brings new life into the world, keeps
it going for a while, and then takes it away ... I just don't know.
What I do know (and I know it no matter what happens) is that, as
long as I have animals, I will have something to do. I will never
wonder what is happening today, or tomorrow. I know my animals will
need fed, watered, groomed and cared for. I know I'll do my best for
them ... and I'll let the music play.