This is what an animal freak does with the ashes of the dead ones

A British animal-obsessed woman shares her home with more than 50 animals, and even Alexandra Ash, 35, took the most extreme action, permanently injecting the ashes of two of her dead pets into her skin so they could "always stay with her." ''According to her.

Alexandra, who has at least 30 tattoos for her adopted animals, put the ashes of her dead cat, Lamb, on her right arm, and the remains of a three-legged fox named Matilda tattooed next to her heart.

 The beginning of this western relationship with animals, according to Alexandra, began when she used her eighteen-year-old cat to help her recover from drug addiction, and she achieved this.

Alexandra currently lives with her husband, Security Guard Michael Evans, (41 years old) in Florida, USA.

Alexandra, who has animal tattoos, got her first tattoo from the ashes of one of her lizards at the age of 18, and Alexandra's body is now "a love letter to all her pets and rescue animals, past and present," she says.

"There is something magical and unconditional about (these) creatures that humans don't have, and I really appreciate it," she said. "Each of these tattoos means something to me and has a story."

Alexandra kept the ashes of one of her animals, a small fox, in an urn, surrounded by small pictures of him, on a memorial shelf in her bedroom, and Alexandra did the same with her cat, who accompanied her on her journey to recovery from addiction from 2007 to 2019.

Now that she is married, Alexandra and her husband have more than 50 animals in the house, including "one crocodile, several lizards, six turtles, two flying squirrels, an owl monkey, and dozens of venomous snakes including cobras, rattlesnakes, 18 kinkajs, and five domestic cats."

She explains, "She and her husband completely redesigned the house so that we could live in it and provide the space the animals needed inside and out, including one of the bedrooms that became a haven for snakes, noting that it was redesigned to be an escape-proof room, with all ceiling openings covered."

Alexandra says the animals are hidden in a way that does not let the casual visitor know about their existence.

She concludes that she considers herself on a mission to rescue these animals, "I am now on a mission to make sure that these animals have the best possible care."

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