Junie among the flowers |
So it seems some days. We had a rough week last week—let’s put it this way, our dogs had a rough week, so therefore so did we. Wednesday Jordan called in a panic to say June Bug was dying. Junie is the youngest of the two Cavalier King Charles Spaniels and by far the most frail. She is eleven, I believe, had a heart attack some five-plus years ago, and spent a week in an oxygen chamber at the doggie cardiologist’s clinic. At the time they gave her another year to eighteen months, so she has surprised everyone and been living on borrow time. She’s fine and seems to enjoy life, although she shows signs of dementia and does not hear or see well. Still, knowing that doesn’t help much when you’re faced with a dog in crisis.
She
didn’t die. She spent two night back at the clinic in oxygen and is back home,
apparently her old self.
But my
Sophie, who now is diagnosed with chronic bronchitis, began that deep coughing
again. She’s no spring chicken either at eleven. I asked the vet what I could
do to prevent another bout of acute bronchitis—seems like we just got through
the last one. He said she was due her allergy shot and needed a refill of some
medicine. It was today before we could get her to the vet, but she’s had her
shot and pill. Tonight she is wheezing heavily but still hungry and ready to
bark at the slightest threat—and there are many. I figure the medications take
at least 24 hours to kick in.
For
now, we’re all relieved to have healthy dogs. But it’s gotten me to thinking
about dogs, people, and the relationships. Our shelters in this area are full,
and once no-kill shelters have been forced to euthanize again. I once read that
dogs sense that coming and know fear just as we would—and that thought haunts
me. The shelters are full, of course, because people are irresponsible dog
owners—they turn in old dogs, sick dogs, dogs that they are tired of without
another thought.
And
then there are the people who have dogs as sort of ornaments. They feed them
and see that they have water and even get medical attention when needed, but
they are sort of remote dog owners. No affection, no bonding, no attachment.
Sometimes
on Facebook someone will ask if anyone else talks to their dog, tells them
goodbye when they leave, etc. I do, and I assure her I’ll be back soon. (To
tease me, my oldest son says, “Naw, we’re never coming back.” Sophie knows who
to believe. I have a friend who developed back trouble and found she could no
longer go up and down three flights of stairs several times a day to walk her
dog. Her solution was not to give up the dog but to move to a first-floor
apartment. Those are my kind of dog people. They recognize that dogs have
feelings and emotions, they know joy and happiness and fear and anger just as
we do. People who say, “My dog is family,” aren’t just kidding. They mean it.
Because
I spend long days alone in my cottage, I’m dependent on Sophie for company. I
carry on conversations with her, and she cocks her head and looks inquisitively
at me. We have our routines: at 4:30 in the afternoon, she wants supper which
involves several courses: first she gets a geriatric (no kidding) chew treat,
then a bit of canned dog food followed by kibble and topped off with a second
treat. Heaven help me if I forget that last step—she lets me know.
The
new routine I’m getting used to is in the morning and is all due to the
introduction of wet food during her last bout with bronchitis. She never before
had anything but kibble and tiny tiny bits of cheese as a reward or bribe. But
bronchitis and/the meds upset her stomach, and the vet recommended half a can
of wet food twice a day. It was like giving me lobster twice a day—she was in
heaven, and predictably when she could go back to kibble, she didn’t want to.
So we have compromised. She wakes me between 5:30 and 6:00, I let her out (and
warn her there will be no food if she doesn’t go potty). Then I give her wet
food, stop by the bathroom, and go back to bed. I can do it in six minutes
flat. And yes, I go back to sleep. The reason I could write a thousand words
today is that as I dozed my subconscious mapped it out. I call that productive
sleep.
Not
sure which of us is in charge here, but we’re happy, and I think we make a
pretty good pair. Sophie wishes all dogs had as good a life as she does.Sophie's sweet face
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