So glad to hear this.
I have worked with wild animal rescue for many years. They are much more complex emotionally than most people can understand. They have very different personalities. I could tell you stories you wouldn't believe.....
We should respect nature, but not glorify it. It's tough out there. There's nothing noble about starving, or being torn to pieces and eaten.
We are not so different from animals. For all our trappings of civilization, we are still in nature. We too will someday be taken by a predator--a car, or a cancer, or a person with a gun, or if we're lucky, old age. But we have many protections we didn't have when we lived in caves, and we can choose a *relatively* safe life. Yet some humans still choose to risk death to climb Everest, or race cars, or fight wars.
Wild animals are just out there at the mercy of nature. Some are tough survivors; others seem born to be hawk-bait. Yet some animals would rather die than be in captivity--have seen it. While some actually *choose* captivity and safety. Seen that too. Not so different from us, when given a choice.
The AMAZING thing that happens when a human rescues a wild animal, is that they may actually have a choice.
(Yes, you dialed the number and made the arrangements, but Sandy is happy there. If she weren't, you would have found another solution. So in that sense, she is calling the shots. She is choosing.)
No one who hasn't experienced this can understand. And some folks are hostile to the idea that animals are anything but food, targets, or mere objects in a harsh system we call nature.
Just so glad Sandy is happy, and not the least surprised she remembers you even after several years.