Cassie's Travel Story
by Patrick Borders
Having had a few hours to think about it,
I have come to the conclusion that Saturday
was a day unlike any other I have ever had.
Cassie is of herself a most incredible little
gift. She is a product of your "miracle
network" of devoted people and, of course,
your vision of love and hope that surpasses
the limits of everyday understanding. It
is wondrous to imagine the numbers of people
who have loved Cassie both there and from
afar. Those giving people who have sent emails
of encouragement and prayers that have worked
explicitly for little Cassie and for Joan
and me. We already love her and all of you
that have done so much for this gift of life.
We know your efforts will come back to each
of you individually many times again.
I wanted to tell you about another aspect
of the trip, however, that was most unexpected.
I have logged well over a million air miles
in my professional career. Needless to say
most airports long ago ran together forming
a blur of motion and anxiety. I, like most
travelers, have become focused on the start
and stop of the trip. I have become somewhat
expert at manipulating my way across the
country and around the world without seeing
much of it or the people that inhabit it.
That all changed during my 17-hour odyssey
Saturday. With unavoidably long layovers
and a three and half pound little "ambassador
of love" there were no strangers in
the world.
Though you told me of the impact of the little
darling in the leather and net carry-on,
I was not prepared for the reaction of almost
everyone everywhere. Two ticket agents changed
my flights without the required penalty for
a change. They "fell" for Cassie
and her story of high tech medicine and hope.
Security staff came out from behind monitors
while hiding their "menacing" metal
detector wands in order not to upset her.
People who very obviously had English as
a second language spoke to me in native tongue
with smiles that interpreted just fine. Everyone
just wanted to touch her, to look into the
gorgeous little Bichon eyes and tell me about
themselves, their pets, their kids, and their
trials, tribulations, and joys. Each started
by talking about a pet they had or once knew.
But most everyone ultimately ended up talking
about themselves and their families. That
was the incredible part. For hours on Saturday
I got to know people from many walks of life
that, for the most part, have been invisible
to me for years.
A new security screener in Tulsa had to know
all about Cassie. The information ladies
at the airport desk told me about their pets
and families. A rapper type street-tough
kid outside Terminal 2 in Chicago sat with
me to learn about Cassie and recounted the
dog he had once, and had loved and lost.
He was most concerned for Cassie's activity
levels given her just completed surgery.
Parents with frowns pulling and tugging on
kids and baggage, stopped to smile and tell
me about their pet at home.
While in Chicago as I was looking for an
exit with access to grass- (no small feat
there) - I bumped into a demure middle-aged
Puerto Rican lady who was pushing a cart
of cleaning supplies and toilet paper. She
wore a smock that boldly displayed her company
and profession in large white letters - SCRUB.
We talked a full ten minutes even though
she
was just off shift. She recounted how she
had just rescued a dog at her own apartment
complex that had been left tied to a picnic
table during an electrical storm. She said
that though he was making a mess of her place,
he had become great friends with her silky
terrier and she wanted to keep him. She didn't
really know what breed he was but said she
had loved all animals from the time she were
a small girl.
A young woman who had just become a baggage
handler sat with me for many minutes and
told me of her young son's fear of dogs.
She looked at Cassie and said, " I know
he would love this one!" As she held
little Cassie she talked of the difficulties
of her life as a single mother.
The story went on for hours. Two young high
school age girls with t-shirts displaying
their foreign exchange friendship organization,
told me they hoped their counterparts from
across the sea would arrive before I had
to leave. I knew however, which of us they
really wanted their friends to meet.
Everywhere it was the same. While boarding
our jet for Roanoke, the last person to get
on our plane was a very large and rotund
man. He was quite unkempt with hair and long
scraggly beard in need of some serious soap
attention. It soon became obvious that he
was also mentally quite slow. On board a
group of young men on their way to the Virginia
Tech football game stared at him and made
a few jokes, which I am certain the man could
hear. He was relocated to another place other
than the one he had been assigned because
the lady next to him asked for the reseating.
He stayed to himself with head down looking
at a large print map of the eastern U.S.
He was expressionless. That is until he saw
Cassie. After seeing Cassie I found he could
not only smile, but also express wonder and
love in his own unique and eloquent way.
Upon arriving at Roanoke airport, a small
girl after hearing about Cassie's surgery
and the people who had worked, hoped, and
prayed for her, promised me that she, by
herself, would say one just for Cassie before
she went to sleep that night.
I am sorry to say that I would have missed
all these people had it not been for our
tiny ambassador of love and life. I cannot
recall before ever having such wonderful
conversations with so many people. In the
process of course we touched each other.
I came to understand that though we as human
beings are all a part of each other in physical
and spiritual ways, we must not underestimate
the connectivity that comes from the spirit
we share with God's other creatures.
We must never underestimate the silent prayer
of a child and the unheard, and now sound, heartbeat of love.