Home » One Day, Ten Tiny Miracles, and One That Flew Too Far 04/11/2025

One Day, Ten Tiny Miracles, and One That Flew Too Far 04/11/2025

? One Day, Ten Tiny Miracles, and One That Flew Too Far
With one old parrot whose goodbye stretched across decades.

Last week gave us one of those days�the kind you feel in your bones. Wildlife rescue stories in one day poured through our doors like a storm: heartbreak, hope, and holy moments, all stacked into 24 hours. We held life, lost life, and witnessed just how hard wild things fight to keep it.
Ten baby opossums.
Mama didn�t make it�killed by a dog. But her pouch was full of life that refused to let go. Ten tiny, tail-clinging miracles, hanging on long after she was gone.
We warmed them. Fed them. Prayed over them.
They’re still with us. Still fighting. Still proving that sometimes survival is the loudest form of praise.
Ten baby opossums snuggled closely together in a soft cloth pouch

Then came the bunny.
A baby. Torn open by a dog. Skin ripped, hope dangling. I almost didn�t try. Almost whispered goodbye before I ever said hello.
But that bunny? That bunny chose life.
We stabilized. We stitched what we could. And come sunrise�
That little one blinked into the new day. Alive.
Baby wild rabbit resting with a bandaged leg on a soft towel

Then the Brown Thrasher.
Sleek, wild, glorious. Until he wasn�t.
A window strike at a car dealership�fast and final.
We got him in time to hold him, but not to save him.
Not every story ends in light.
But every single life still matters.
Y�all, put up your window decals. It takes five minutes and it saves lives.
Brown Thrasher resting peacefully on a patterned cloth near a glowing candle

And just when I thought my heart couldn�t stretch any further�
He came in.
A 25-year-old Great-Billed Parrot.
He didn�t come from trauma or a storm�he came from love.
Decades of it.
His human is going into care. Dementia.
The long, slow goodbye that leaves empty spaces long before the body follows.
And now this parrot, this regal elder with stories in his eyes and dust on his feathers, needs a new chapter.
Not because he was unwanted�but because love outlived ability.
And if we�re lucky�truly lucky�that�ll be us one day.
Living long enough to have to hand off the things we once swore we�d never let go.
Because we trusted someone would catch them gently on the other side.
Colorful great-billed parrot sitting by a window, gazing into the light

All in one day.

A whole world of pain and possibility bundled into 24 hours.
Tiny opossums clinging to hope.
A bunny who saw the sunrise.
A bird who didn�t make it.
And a parrot carrying decades of devotion on his wings.
This work breaks us, shapes us, remakes us.
But if it teaches anything, it�s this:
Golden sunrise over a peaceful lake with birds, trees, and a temple reflecting on the water

Every life matters.

Every goodbye is sacred.
And every chance to help is holy ground.
????

All of these animals came through the doors of Broadbent Wildlife Sanctuary, where we give wild lives a second chance every single day.

Not sure when to intervene? The NWRA has guidelines to help you determine if wildlife truly needs rescue.

Bird strikes are often preventable with simple changes. The American Bird Conservancy offers great solutions.

Parrots can live decades � planning ahead matters. PEAC shares resources for long-term care and ethical rehoming.


Discover more from Ruffled Feathers Parrot Sanctuary Inc.

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Scroll to Top