by GoodGrief on Mon Oct 10, 2005 6:59 am
This Saturday at around about 1:45 PM, the vet arrived to put my dog down. Jen-jen was old and suffering, and we'd been talking about it for over a year, but it was oh-so-hard.
Some days she seemed all right, apart from being old and feeble, but some days she could barely stand up, her back legs dragged uselessly on the ground when she tried to walk, she lost control of her bladder.
The space in front of the kitchen door is stained yellow, but it's been her rightful place since she was a puppy and my sister's lovely young golden retriever has already usurped our attentions to the point where we really couldn't bear to deny her the dignity of the top spot, and I for one couldn't bear to see her hurt expression if she were to be chased away permanently. So there she stayed, and we took a wide step coming out of that door.
Sometimes my walks outside were curtailed when she started following me, despite being in obvious pain.
She smelled so bad that if you touched her the smell would not leave for hours without you scrubbing the skin off your hands, and her fur from her rump down was wet with her own piss. I always made sure to walk wide of her, and never patted her anymore. I felt guilty about that all the time, but the smell was overpowering. I did mutter 'good dog' occasionally as I passed her, but more often than not this made her follow me out of gratitude for being noticed, and I had to go inside so as to stop her paining herself any further.
It hasn't been easy for anyone. We all knew that the time was coming, was well past, but I live in college during the Semester and I wanted to be there to say goodbye. So this Friday as I came home for the weekend, right after delivering the news that Goosie (the Goose) had been taken by a fox, plunging her adopted son Fella (a peacock) into bewildered mourning, my mother told me that the vet was coming the following day, before lunch, to deliver my dog from misery.
He was late, and interrupted my lunch preparations, but I didn't hesitate to rush outside, then rush in again in search of shoes, plagued by irrational fears that they would have done the deed already if I didn't hurry.
I needn't have even bothered with shoes, because the deed was to take place on the verandah. My Dad and the vet were standing on the verandah looking at Jen as she staggered around in her usual fashion, the vet with his hands on his hips in a casual way, a needle clasped in one fist. For all that I'd known for months that this was coming, it just didn't seem 'real' until I saw him with that needle. I really felt like there was a shapeless lump of lead weighing down my stomach in that moment, so I can testify that it isn't just a colourful turn of phrase used in books.
Jen didn't really know what was happening, of course, which made the whole thing seem horribly deceptive, even if there was no way that we could possibly have made her understand.
I'd been vaguely worried that I hadn't cried up until then, but as I made my over to her for my final goodbye the tears came and continued unabated for most of the afternoon. I gave her a pat and a hesitant hug, which became a genuine if rather teary cuddle as the weight of what was about to happen hit me again, and has continued to hit me since. Even days after the event I still stop, stunned by the revelation that my dog is dead. It happens in much the same way it did for other life-changing events, like graduating from highschool. Suddenly something that has been a constant for most of your life is simply gone - Jen-jen had been a Christmas present for me when I was two-and-a-half. I clung to her - as gently as I could - and even rested my head against hers, and for all that she seemed to realise that I was distressed my sudden display of affection didn't seem to surprise her - even after so long, she took it all as her due.
When I let go my Dad suggested that I go inside. I made it as far as the door but determined to watch - I'd said I'd be there for her. When it was done I rushed inside and scrubbed hard and fast - not to take my mind off anything, but just so that I didn't have to stand around feeling helpless.
After that I went back out and stood around feeling helpless anyway, staring at her old body and murmuring "Goodbye, Jen" in a tiny voice until my Dad came back with the empty chook-feed sack in which he would bear her to her grave in the rainforest garden out near the orchard. To me the sack seemed curiously appropriate. Perhaps it was because it reminded me of my early childhood when Jen was a puppy - chook feed sacks, piles of dirt, anthills, bricks, old logs, trampolines, gum trees, wallabies, coloured chalk, old cars and Jen-jen summed up my early years, and it seems appropriate that she was buried in the trappings of our lively childhood together. In any event, I couldn't have been more comforted by the sight of a horse-drawn carriage than I was of that sack. It was a thing of home.
Despite this, I couldn't stay to watch him lift her limp body into the sack, and returned - with a feeling of uncomfortable weirdness, to preparing my lunch. I got it in the oven in time to watch out of the kitchen window as buried her in the spot we'd picked out. He seemed to be crying still, as well.
The next day we planted two young trees around her grave, making a triangle with an existing tree. When those trees get taller, we'll plant bromiliads and ferns there too.
When I left, Prince (the retriever) still didn't quite seem to understand what had happened.
I'm glad she's no longer suffering (hey, All Dogs Go To Heaven, right?) but I still haven't adjusted to the idea of her not being there when I go home on weekends and holidays, pained with the effort of reaching the gate but glad to see me.
I think if we'd done it earlier, before I saw her suffer so much, this whole thing would have been a lot harder, but having heard her cry in the night (and cry is the only word for it - yelp doesn't communicate the sound effectively at all) at least I can comfort myself that she's safe from suffering.
I don't quite know how to end a post like this, because I have neither a suggestion, request or question, but if you've wallowed through to the end of this, thankyou for giving me your time and I apologise for any sunshine this might have taken out of your day.
-GG
What exactly is meant by the above statement I may never know.
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