Not that he was much of a runner anymore. He was a bit more than 13 years old, and he blew out his ACLs (or the dog equivalent) last June. While the injury healed, he limped along ever after, struggling with what was probably arthritis (which the vet told us was prone to afflict dogs recovering from ACL tears).
That's not what did him in, however. I did. Which is to say, I had the dog hospital euthanize him. He had been taken there by the kennel, suffering from a pneumonia and laboring, unable to breathe, without assistance. Blood work and diagnostics showed issues with both his kidneys and liver, possibly due to some undetected cancer. I'm certain it didn't help that, of my two dogs, he was always the one that was high strung, a bundle of nerves, prone to fear and not especially comfortable around strange people. When I got to him, it looked like he hadn't slept in a day or more. For an old dog that slept close to 18 hours a day. Which is to say: he looked terrible...and miserable.
The kennel called me Sunday night, to tell me what was going on. Monday morning I was on a flight out of Bozeman. I was able to get to the hospital shortly after 2pm. He was happy to see me. He couldn't get up (too weak), but his breathing became regular even without the oxygen, and he almost immediately went to sleep, finally relaxed. Finally, somewhat, comforted.
He died at 3pm. The next morning I was down at SeaTac by 7am catching a flight back to Bozeman and the rest of my family. We drove to Missoula, where we held an impromptu wake for him at Big Sky Brewery. I limited myself to a couple pints since I was doing the driving.
I'm not writing all this to eulogize my dog: I'm not going to talk about his life, his foibles, or the things that made him special to my family. I'm writing this because I feel its a story I need to recount in order to move forward and write non-dog-related content on this blog.
I'm sure it sounds strange to some that I'd spent so much effort or expense on a dog (hey, what are credit cards for?). He was just a dog, after all...not a spouse or child or parent dying in some hospital bed. But he was someone who'd been more a part of my life, and for whom I'd been responsible, for longer than most human beings I know (hell, my oldest child is only ten)...I couldn't just flush away a life over a phone call. I couldn't just let him die in a box, surrounded by strangers.
My uncle (who is eight years older than me) just lost his wife of 25 years last December to cancer. Because of Covid, he wasn't even able to be with her till the very end. He's only just starting to recover from the experience. I think about how many people lost human loved ones over the last 18-19 months, and who were unable to be with their family and friends because of the pandemic, and it just makes me...so...sad. The immensity of it. One of my wife's friends in Mexico...younger than myself...died of Covid a few months back, leaving behind a wife and a couple kids. He was unable to see them. That. Sucks.
My dog was...well, just a dog. But we loved him. And he was the lesser of our two beagles. If it had been my older dog who'd been in the hospital, our whole family would have driven back to Seattle to be with her. Buddy always had been the low man on the totem pole.
Anyway. Just needed to get that all off my chest.
Condoglences.
ReplyDeleteDeepest sympathy. A peaceful passing is the last duty we owe them, and the hardest. May his memory be a blessing.
ReplyDeleteSorry for your loss.
ReplyDeleteI euthanized my cat at the beginning of the year. I was his second owner. His first was a girlfriend who died 11 years before. That cat was a living connection to her, so his death doubled the grief.
He was high cat on the totem poll, our other cat was and is still lower. Weird how that works.
Someone's got to be the "alpha."
DeleteMy deepest condolences JB. Anyone who says it's not like a child can go f**k themselves.
ReplyDeleteSure, that's partially the New Yorker in me talking but also my very first dog was a Beagle and I love canines so much caring for them is basically what I do for a living.
I like people. Some people I like very much. Humans as a entire species largely disappoint me. Dogs on the other hand...well dogs are special. My company is called 'Friend of Dogs'.
All my love and a raised pint to you, your family, and your fallen friend. My boy will howl for him tonight.
I'm so sorry, JB. Our pets are absolutely part of our families and going back to be with him at the end, to send him on peacefully... it was the right thing to do. My condolences to you and your family.
ReplyDeleteI'm sorry to read about your dog.
ReplyDeleteSeems completely appropriate to me. Dogs are family. Cats, too. We don't have any pets at the moment, but I still remember all the dogs and cats we had when I was growing up on the farm.
ReplyDeleteThank you to everyone. I appreciate it.
ReplyDeleteI know the feeling. Last year one of my dachshunds became paraplegic due to spinal disc herniation. I spent a lot of money on a unsuccessful sugery but in the end I had to euthanize her because the paraplegic condition was leading to other health problems. You made the right thing.
ReplyDeleteI'm sorry to hear this, JB. Dogs aren't "just animals," they're members of the family. My daughter's beagle mix developed a fast-moving cancer back in the spring and had to be put down, and it cut us all to the quick even though we'd only had her two years. A 13 year old dog is too big a part of your daily life to casually dismiss.
ReplyDeleteI have no idea if it's stupid or sentimental to care so much about a dog. I only know I'm a blubbering mess everytime I have to put a friend down.
ReplyDeleteSorry for your loss. In April, I lost my cat Zelda after I had to make the hard choice to euthanize her, versus a two-month regimen of unapproved and expensive gray market drugs for the otherwise-incurable viral mutation that she had (coincidentally, a mutated strain of feline coronavirus). In one way it was easier because I hadn't had her for very long, but in another way it was even more heartbreaking because she wasn't even 2 years old yet and I expected her to be with me for another 10 to 15 years.
ReplyDeleteI adopted two awesome little kittens a couple of weeks ago, though, just over 3 months old now and growing fast!
Sorry you've lost your friend.
ReplyDeleteSorry for your loss, he was a part of your family. Glad you were able to be there with him in the end.
ReplyDeleteMe, too, Bill. I count myself fortunate.
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