My Cheetah Friend -

He’s not my pet. He never was.

Here’s a short, heartwarming post based on You can use it for a blog, social media, or personal journal. Title: My Cheetah Friend

But he is, and always will be, my cheetah friend. My Cheetah Friend

I don’t see Kavi anymore. He was released into a protected reserve two years ago. But I still dream of him—streaking across the savanna, a ribbon of sunlight and spots, free.

I used to, too. Until I met him.

That was the moment I stopped being afraid.

His name is Kavi. I met him at a wildlife sanctuary in Namibia, where I’d gone to volunteer for a summer. He was found as a cub—his mother lost to poachers. Too young to hunt. Too trusting to survive in the wild alone. He’s not my pet

Over the weeks, Kavi became less of a subject to observe and more of a… friend. He’d rub his head against my shoulder like an oversized house cat. He’d chirp—yes, cheetahs chirp, like birds—when he saw me coming with his afternoon meal. Sometimes, he’d run just for the joy of it, his spotted body turning into a golden blur, then circle back to check if I’d seen.

The first time I entered his enclosure, he didn’t sprint or snarl. He just watched me with those amber eyes—calm, curious, and impossibly deep. Then he yawned. Title: My Cheetah Friend But he is, and

I learned things from Kavi. That speed isn’t always about aggression—sometimes it’s just joy. That trust, once earned, is fiercer than any claw. And that wild hearts can still choose to be gentle.

Most people see a cheetah and think: danger. speed. predator.