Laura Del Gaudio

LAURA DEL GAUDIO

Here is the Book “Lifetimes” The Beautiful way to Explain Death to Children By Byron Mellonie and Robert Ingpen

There is a beginning

and an ending for everything

that is alive.

In between is living.

All around us, everywhere,

beginnings and endings

are going on all the time.

With living in between.

This is true for all living things.

For plants.

For people.

For birds.

For fish.

For trees.

For animals.

Even for

the tiniest insect.

Nothing that is alive

goes on living for ever.

How long it lives depends upon

what it is and what happens

while it is living.

Sometimes, living things become ill

or they get hurt.

Mostly, of course, they get better again

but there are times when they are so badly hurt

or they are so ill that they die because

they can no longer stay alive.

This can happen when they are young,

or old, or anywhere in between.

It may be sad, but it is the way

of all things, and it is true

for everything that is alive.

For plants.

For people.

For birds.

For fish.

For trees.

For animals.

there are of living things

in our world.

Each one has its own special lifetimes.

Trees that are tall and strong

grow slowly, standing in the sunshine

and in the rain.

Some of them live for a very long

time indeed, as long as a hundred

years or more.

That is their lifetime.

Rabbits and mice grow up in only

a few weeks. Then they go on to live

for a year or two, crunching up carrots

and nibbling at cheese until they grow

old and very tired and it is

their time to die.

That is how it happens to be

for rabbits and mice.

It is the way they live, and it is their lifetime

Flowers and vegetables, planted as

seeds at the beginning of Spring when

the earth is warm, grow quickly

to live through the heat of Summer.

The days pass and they become old

during Autumn when it is cooler.

Then, when Winter comes and it is cold,

they die.

It is the way they live.

It is their lifetime.

Butterflies live as butterflies

for only a few weeks. Once they have

dried their wings, they flutter and fit

from leaf to flower. At first, they are

bright and quick, but as time passes

they begin to slow down until finally

they can go no further. They rest for

a while, and then they die.

That is the way butterflies live, and

that is their lifetime.

Birds grow up quite quickly, too.

It is often no more than a few months

from the time they hatch until they are

strong enough to fly and feed themselves.

How long they live after that seems to depend

upon their size. Mostly, the bigger they are,

the longer they will be alive.

That is the way birds live:

some for as long as fifty years,

others no more than two or three.

But, however long, it is their lifetime

for each one.

Fish, swimming in lakes and rivers

or in the sea, can be so tiny it is hard to tell

that they are there at all, or so big that the

only way to describe them is enormous.

Again, as far as we know, it seems that

the smaller they are, the shorter will be

their lifetime, but that is how it is for fish.

Their lives can be as little as a day or so,

or as long as eighty or ninety years.

It is the way they live,

and those are their lifetimes.

And people?

Well, like everything else that is alive,

people have lifetimes, too.

They live for about sixty or seventy years,

sometimes even longer, doing all the things

that people do like growing up

and being grown up,

It can happen, though, just as it does with

all other living things, that people

become ill or they get hurt.

Mostly, of course they get better again

but their are times when they are so badly

hurt or they are so ill that they die

because they can no longer stay alive.

It may be sad, but that is how it is

for people. It is the way they live

and it is their lifetime.

So no matter how long they are,

or how short, lifetimes are really

all the same.

They have beginnings, and endings,

and their is living in between.

That is how things are.

For plants.

For people.

For birds.

For fish.

For animals.

Even for the tiniest insects.

EVERYWHERE!

LET’S KEEP IN TOUCH!

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