Life QuoteOthers have given and dedicated their lives for you… so go and live it.
GifAboutUsername: ~Trompy
Name: Keiki Amani, aka Ama
Gender: Female
Gender for breeding purposes: Female
Theme SongPersonality395/500 words
You’re sitting under the shade of a tree. It’s 75 degrees F with a small breeze. You smell freshly cut grass and blooming flowers. Streams of sunlight filter through the rustling branches as songbirds sing away above your head. Not even a single mosquito in sight. A day and location so perfect, you begin to doze off into a sweet nap, with the grasses tickling your nose as you lay your head down on the ground.
This is what Ama’s personality is like. There is absolutely nothing to dislike about her; which is the sole reason why some have come to such a conclusion. Ama is sweeter than sugar, and has never said a mean word to anybody. In fact, she is usually quiet, taking in her surroundings without speaking. When she does, her voice is soft, barely above a whisper. If you asked what selflessness and kindness was, her picture would be the definition.
She likes to cook and bake goods to give as gifts for those who are needy or extra nice, and will always be the first to volunteer for any community project. She is the favorite babysitter among adults and children alike, and the elders adore her company and willingness to listen to their endless stories. As if her days weren’t already busy baking, cooking, babysitting and spending time with the elderly, she finds time to tend the community garden every single day. Ama loves everyone and everything, and finds something to love and live for every day. When asked why she is always so kind, she simply replies “Life is too short to be unhappy, and if you spend all your time looking at its flaws, you will never see it’s light.” She says she even loves the mosquitoes, because they are a plentiful source of food for the birds and the bugs. Spiders? They help her decorate for Halloween.
Of all the years, nobody has known her to dislike something, or anyone. Heck, when someone is mean to her, she will usually go out of her way to show said person/viscet kindness, for she believes that sometimes, others are mean because they’ve forgotten what kindness is, and they just need a reminder. This kind of kindness doesn’t come without a history of pain, though, and not many know the story.
You’re about to be one of the rare few.
ArtFlower story853/Unlimited words
Ama had just finished pruning the community garden. The sun was starting to lower itself closer to the horizon, and she sighed at the beauty of the changing sky, as she did most days. Today, the sunset was casting a rainbow of colors instead of the usual reds and yellows. She took a moment to appreciate the sight before dumping her pruning bucket by the compost and slowly walking her way towards the edge of town. The half-gravel, half-asphalt roads of her small town were bustling with visclings expending the last of their energy before their mothers called them in for bedtime. The layout of the brick buildings were imbedded into her mind from years walking the same path. She passed a young viscet gently packing away her fruits and vegetables from her food stand that had been open for business earlier that day, and stepped into the building behind her.
As Ama opened the door to the shop, a little bell attached to the door called her out on her entry. An older viscet popped their head out from behind a curtain behind the counter. “Ah, Ama. Right on time as always. She smiled politely as she looked around the store. “What do you have for me today, sir?” Flowers in pots lined every wall and littered the floor. It was messy, but beautiful. She inhaled the scent of a dozen different flowers as the florist appeared from the back with a tote full of hydrangeas of all different colors. Ama’s smile widened. “They just reached full bloom today. I knew they are your favorite, so I saved the best ones for you.” Ama blushed, her already pink fur feeling hot. “Thank you so much, sir. How much do I owe you?” The man laughed. “Nothing, as always. Have a nice evening, miss.” Ama said goodbye with a huge smile on her face, and picked up the surprisingly heavy tote. When she exited the store, the man locked the door and waved as she walked towards the edge of town.
The last of the townsfolk were heading inside their houses as Ama passed them. The sight of Ama was usually the curfew for the children in this area; that’s how punctual she was. 7’o’clock, on the dot. The sun was touching the horizon now, and Ama knew she had an hour of light left. And that’s all she needed. Nobody was at home waiting for her, so she had all the time in the world.
At the very edge of town, the birds started quieting down with the dying light and watched as Ama turned into the town cemetery. She sat down the tote, and picked up a bundle of flowers. With a smile on her face, she moved from headstone to headstone, down the rows, placing flowers on top of them. This is how she ended her days. She could tell you each name that lay here, and probably in order, too. Today there were no new graves, which made it a good day. Her tail swished back and forth as she walked, humming a tune for nobody to hear. Her pace always starts off strong, but slows down to that of a snail as she reaches the end of the line.
She reaches down to the bottom of the tote and picks up the remaining flowers. Her smile weakens as she comes to see the last grave. She holds onto the last two flowers and stares with sadness at the gravestone. It’s a double grave, like a mausoleum for two. She takes a deep breath of the evening air and feels a gust of wind tousle her mane and lift her hat. She places the hydrangeas on top of the grave, and sighs, sitting down into the grass. “Hello, Mom, Dad. My neighbor laid an egg today. We’re all super excited to see the little hatchling. The father died in the war, like you did, dad. I give the mother pies and cookies almost every day. And yes, I make them from scratch. One of the elderly ladies I talked to today said she knew you, mom. It’s been twenty-five years and she is the first one to remember you. But that’s how it is with most of the viscets in this cemetery, isn’t it?”
Ama talked to the grave of her parents until the sky turned into a dark blue and the stars twinkled above, with the bright moon her only source of light. Ama shivered from the chilly air, and stood up. With a final smile at her parents, she ambled back to the now-empty tote, and listened to the sound of her hooves click against the ground as she made her way back home. She smiled, hoping that her daily deliverance of flowers to the forgotten make them smile down on her from heaven. Especially her parents. War and sickness had taken her parents, and many others in the cemetery. Most had been forgotten or ignored, and she was bound and determined not to let them be forgotten for another day…
At least, not during her lifetime.
History789/1500 words
Her mother’s name was Hydrangea, just like the flowers she placed down on the grave. Ama’s father said he planted a hydrangea bush in the backyard and claimed he was going to marry those flowers someday. That was his proposal to her. It was the tackiest thing she had ever heard, but it worked. Ama always loved the flower, because it reminded her of her parents, even if she didn’t even have a memory of her mother. She had gotten sick and passed away before Ama hatched.
Ama’s father was forced to raise her with only the help of his mother, Ama’s grandmother. He went to war when she was ten. He never came back. Her grandmother died of a broken heart from her lost son no more than a month later, and Ama spiraled into a depression. All alone in her family’s house, she didn’t know what to live for anymore. That’s when she started skipping school. She went unnoticed, it seemed, for almost three months. Three months that she sat and wallowed in pity, suffering from her losses, and debating the reason for life entirely. That was until a classmate showed up at her door one day.
Opening the creaky door, Ama looked at the classmate, confused. Before she could tell her to go away, the girl viscet handed her a beautiful bouquet of flowers. “I know you’re going through a lot…” the viscet started. “But it is a beautiful day you know. Don’t waste it because you’re sad. Please?”
Without waiting to see what Ama would say, she bound off back into town. Ama didn’t even recall the viscet’s name, but it made her stop to think. Looking down at the flowers she now held, she took a moment. The smell of the flowers woke her brain. It was the first thing of beauty she had experienced since her father passed. The cloud of sadness seemed to have lifted, and cautiously, she opened the squeaky front door, and stepped outside.
Ama took note of the birds’ songs. How beautiful the sound was to her once deaf ears; making her wonder how she had never truly heard them before. She saw the greenness of the grass, and asked herself how she had never truly seen it before. The sky, and how beautifully blue it was: the wind, and how it tickled against her fur: the sun, and how it’s rays enveloped her with the warmth like a hug. Tears streamed down her little face as all the wonders of the world hit her at once. “How did I never notice?” She took a long walk around town that day. Beginning to appreciate the world and see all of the good within it. Hours had passed before she realized the time, but even though the sun was setting, she found herself right outside the gates of the cemetery where her parents were buried.
With a quick glance, anyone could tell that this cemetery wasn’t a very lively place. Wilted flowers lay on some of the graves, and the grass grew high from lack of traffic for the rest of them. Ama found her parents and found herself sitting, exclaiming all the amazing things her eyes had opened to that day. And how she wished they could be there to see it.
“I can’t believe I had forgotten how to feel…” Ama whispered. “All of these senses, these things I took for granted came back all at once… I won't let myself take anything for granted ever again.” She saw a dandelion growing by her feet, and picked it, laying it on top of the grave. “I never want to forget you…” She looked around, and remembered her father bringing her here occasionally to commemorate friends who had also fallen in the war. “It would be wrong for anyone to be forgotten.”
It was then that she decided she wouldn’t let anyone in this graveyard be forgotten. She would come back every day with flowers, and would adorn each grave whilst memorizing their names. She might not know who they were, or why they lay here today, but she knew that she wasn’t going to let them be forgotten.
Sometimes she will run into someone also mourning a loved one or family member, and will ask to learn their stories. Ama knows it isn’t much, but living her life with happiness, and taking advantage of life while she can, is the best she can do to make those who have fallen proud. That’s what they would have wanted from their families. Their lives were cut short, and Ama is going to make darn sure that she lives hers to the very best. Not just for herself…
But for them.
Note: Extras included one art piece, one theme song and a life quote. Art = 1 extra, words less than 350 = 1 extra. 2 extras used total.