Do The Right Thing

Yesterday, we drove to Long Island.  Every year, on the Friday after Thanksgiving, we go to place Christmas blankets on my husband’s parents’ grave.  This year, we placed one on his son’s grave too.  It was a strange day, solemn and somber but crisp and clear with a striking winter sky.  The ride is an hour and a half one way so we try to get on the road early.  We never stay long, the wind is usually too bitter to stand among the gravestones for more than a few minutes.  We place the blanket of pine boughs and red ribbon on the ground.  We hold hands and Paul shares memories of his family.  We shed some tears and then walk back to the car.  This year was the first with Matthew gone.  We spent a few extra moments there.  It still seems like his death was a mistake.

We had to be mindful of the time.  We had to get back to run errands before we had to take Gilligan to the vet again for another progress check.  We had been working really hard with him the past week.  I started bathing him everyday to protect his skin from urine scald.  I was getting up at 5:00 am to do it before I went to work.  We tried using a diaper on him but he hated it; it stressed him out and it was difficult to get his corkscrew tail through it.  His wheels arrived on Tuesday and on Wednesday we tried to get him adjusted in them.  He lasted about one minute before he was struggling to get out.  I mentally put together a plan to ease him into them.  We bought a special hammock bed with a mesh bottom that would allow the pee to drain away from his body and help keep him dry.  We got him to lay on it for about half and hour.  He actually feel asleep.  But when he woke up, the first thing he did was try to drag himself off it.  He has always been the kind of dog who would do exactly what he wanted, forget what you wanted.  It’s always been a challenge to find a way to make him think things were his idea.  So we put him back on the floor with towels and wee-wee pads.

He was good about letting us know when he was wet.  He would wimper and I knew I needed to pick him up and clean him and put him down on clean towels.  I was doing two or three loads of towels a day.  When I picked him up, I would check for any new hot spots or ulcers.  The big one on his right haunch was almost completely healed. I noticed there was signs of one starting on his rear left foot.  That was the dead leg.  I planned on asking the vet for suggestions like putting a sock on that leg to protect it.  He began waking us up at night, howling when he peed.  I would get up  and go downstairs to clean him up and change the towels.  Most nights, I would sit with him for awhile before going back to bed.  I would lay on the floor with him and stroke his head and tell him what a good boy he was.  He would look back at me with those black olive eyes that had grown cloudy and sigh.  He had a special spot on the side of his face that I would rub and he would make a sound like a purr.  He would close his eyes and drift off to sleep and I would go back upstairs and wait for the alarm to go off.

He’s always been a tough guy.  When the other dogs would bark at something, he would bark and howl too, even though he had no idea what they were barking at.  But his bark and howl had gotten thin and weak.  When the other dogs got treats, he would pick up his head and look at me  like “And where’s mine?”  He was eating a full can of dog food a day and drinking a small bowl of water twice a day.  He frequently tried to get up and could scoot himself across the floor to get where he wanted to be.  When I picked him up to clean him, he could balance on his own for about a minute before his legs gave out and he sank back down again.  And on Thanksgiving Day, he stood up by himself – four times.  It was a struggle and he was only up briefly, but he got  up.

On Thanksgiving night, I had a nightmare.  It’s one I used to have frequently but hadn’t had in a long time.  Usually, I’m standing on a beach and look up and see a huge wave headed my way.  I know there is no way to escape so I just wait for it to hit.  I always wake up before it does.  This time, I was in the water in a small boat.  I looked up and saw this wave coming at me getting bigger and higher the closer it got.  Then I was inside the wave curl and the sky was replaced by water.  I knew that the only chance I had to survive was to dive into the wave it self.  I did and then woke up.

When we got home on Friday from the trip to the cemetary, we didn’t have a lot of time to get to the vet’s.  I checked Gilligan and he had some poop stuck to his tail fur.  I got the safety scissors and began to cut it out.  While I was doing that, he peed all over himself.  I got a bucket of warm water and a wash cloth and tried to clean him up.  My husband came in and said we had to go so I wrapped Gilligan in a clean towel and carried him to the car.  We had to wait a few minutes when we got there.  I cradled him in my lap and kissed his nose.  He looked up into my eyes and we just stared at each other.

Karen the vet tech brought us into the exam room.  I explained that he had just peed on himself and we didn’t have the time to clean him up.  She went to get fresh towels and some waterless dog shampoo.  I laid him down on his side.   She came back in and tried to get the pee off him.  His underbelly was pretty matted, so she took the clippers and shaved it a bit.  He was laying on the side he never lays on and I got a look at the outside of his dead leg.  There were ulcers on the side of his foot and on the joint in his leg.  Dr. Maizel came in and looked at Gilligan.  He didn’t touch him, he didn’t examin him; he just looked.  I told him we had been bathing him daily to try to keep him clean.  He asked up if he was still eating.  I said yes, he has a good appetite.  I told him about the special bed and that he had stood up four times on Thanksgiving.  Dr. Maizel said he would be back and left.  Karen followed him and then came back and said he was looking up some medication.  She brought us a belly band to try instead of the diaper.  She said sometimes that worked better than the diaper with males.  Then she went out too.  It was just Paul and I alone with Gilligan. I looked at him laying there, really looked at him for the first time.  The fur on him lower half, his beautiful white fur, fur like silk, like soft clouds shining in the sun, was stained brown and matted.  He smelled.  No matter how much I cleaned him,he smelled.  Gilligan had always been part cat.  He groomed himself every day and always looked like a show dog.  Where his belly had been shaved, his sweet piglet pink belly, was red and irratated and would soon be breaking out in sores.  And his left leg, the dead one, had ulcers down to the bone that had broken out overnight.  I was seeing him the way Dr. Maizel had seen him when he walked into the room.  He had said nothing but I could read the look on his face. I went to the treat container and took out some live treats.  I gave them to Gillie and he gobbled them down.  I asked Paul “What should we do?”  “I don’t know,” he said.  “But I don’t think he is going to get any better.”

Dr. Maizel came back in with some tubes of medication.  He explained what they were and how to use them.  He also told us that the ulcers on Gillie’s leg were serious and at his age, would be slow to heal.  He was at risk for painful, deadly infection.  They also indicated that the circulation in that leg was shutting down and that was not a good sign.  He agreed that he was a fighter but that things were only going to get worse.

I looked at Gillie.  I looked at my husband.  He said nothing. We were all silent for a moment.  Then I said ” I think we have to let him go.  He wasn’t in pain before and he may not be in pain now but he will be and soon.  And we won’t be able to do anything for him. OK, let’s do this.”

Dr. Maizel, who is one of the kindest, most compassionate men I know, shook his head yes.  “I think this is the right thing”, he said.  I leaned down and whispered to Gillie.  I told him he was a good boy and that soon he would feel better again.  He would be able to walk and run and nothing would hurt.  Dr. Maizel came back with a seditive.  When he injected him, Gilligan began to struggle.  I stroked his head and told him to relax, he wasn’t going to fight me on this one.  I put my face next to his.  I rubbed that spot always made him purr.  Dr. Maizel gave him the second injection and we waited.  I kept telling him “That’s it.  Good Boy.  I love you”.

At approximately 5:00 pm, I unhooked his leash and let him run.

image

Posted in compassion, Dogs, Love | Tagged , | Leave a comment

There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio

Yesterday was the six month anniversary of my step-son’s death.  My husband said nothing about it and neither did I.  I thought, perhaps, he didn’t want to talk about it.

Matthew’s death has been numbing for all of us.  I have tried to give comfort to my husband by reminding him that Matthew is still with us.  His spirit is around us always.  When we first talked about it, Paul asked for a rainbow as a sign.  One appeared in the sky.  Since then, it has happened for him several times.

My focus has been on my husband.  I haven’t spent much time thinking about Matthew.  But today, while driving to the train station, I reached out to him.  I asked him if he knew how much I loved his father.  I told him that I loved him too but that I don’t grieve for him the way his father does.  I said I realized I was only his step-mom and that he hadn’t really known me all that well but I wanted him to know how sorry I was for what happened to him and how his life was ended just at a time when it should have been beginning.  Then I asked if maybe he could send me a rainbow too, just so I knew he understood.  I smiled to myself because I knew this wasn’t a day I was likely to see a rainbow.  It was sparkling clear and cold, not a cloud in the sky.

While I stood on the platform, waiting for the train to arrive, I pulled out my phone and took a few photos.  There is a photography contest I want to enter and I was still looking for the right shot.  It was too bright outside to see much of what I got, so I waited to check until I got on the train.  I settled into my seat and began to scroll through the images.  When I got to the last one, this is what I saw.

image

Thank you, Matthew.  You made me very happy.  I’m sure your Dad will be happy too.

Posted in Daily Life, Death, Faith, Grief, Spirit | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

On Losing A Friend

I grew up in a family that had a cliche for everything.  My mother would have said “When it rains, it pours.”  And she would have been right.  In my life right now I have a sick dog, a sick aunt and yesterday, I said goodbye to a dear friend.  My full coverage, full support, underwire Soma bra died.

Women understand that there are three things we hate to loose – a great hairdresser, a gynecologist with warm instruments and a comfortable bra that fits right and doesn’t make us look like an Appalachian grandmother.

I loved that Soma bra.  It was with me for over a year.  I have two more, a black one and a blush one.  But this was my nude one; the one that I could wear under anything.  It was not your standard industrial strenght “over-the-shoulder-boulder-holder”.  It was attractive. It was lacy.  IT WAS COMFORTABLE!

I treated it well.  I washed it regularly with cold water in the Gentle Cycle. I rotated wearing it so the elastic had a chance to snap back.  I followed all the proper care instructions and yet…..

Yesterday afternoon, I turned in my chair and “pop”, the underwire snapped.  I was left in a most difficult position at work.  The broken underwire stuck out in such a way as to make it look like I had grown a Madonna cone breast out of my right side.  And it poked me in the arm.  The option of removing the offending garment did not exist as I am a full-figured gal and I no longer look forward.  It’s more of a “stare at the floor” kind of thing.   I spent the rest of the day adjusting myself like a Major League Ball Player and walking with my right arm stuck to my side like Nicolas Cage in “Moonstruck”.

When I got home, I momentarily considered the possibility of potential duct tape repair.  But I knew it was too late for that.  I gave my friend a respectful send off, hesitating briefly because I wasn’t sure if the metal parts meant it belonged with the recyclables.

Today, I will go online and buy a new Soma full coverage, full support underwire bra in nude.  But it won’t be the same.  It never is.  Each one is an individual.  It will take time to adjust to the differences.

I will miss you, Old Friend.  Thanks for your support.

image  Continue reading

Posted in Daily Life, Loss | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Angry Bones

I have a secret.

I have anger in my bones.

Deep in the marrow,

Hot, burning grains

that grind and crunch with every move.

And in the darkest chamber of my heart,

it pulses with a sickly, green glow.

I dare not look at it.

It is hideous, I know.

I have seen it in others

who loved me with their anger.

It has sharp teeth and long claws

and will rip me to pieces

if let it from it’s hiding place.

But the monster grows in the darkness,

I must call to it

and name it friend.

I must look the Gorgon in the face

Or surely, it will devour me.

image

I have always been frozen by anger.  I grew up with a mother whose anger came out of nowhere.  I was with a man for twenty four years who terrorized me with his anger.  I was a victim; the receipient of the anger of others.  I struggled with depression for decades.  I dared not fight back.  I had seen anger.  It was terrible, frightening, a destroyer.  If allowed my anger out, it would devour me.

My husband and I are working through a rough patch just now.  His grief over his son’s death shows itself as anger.  And although it is not meant for me, I often bear the brunt of it.  But for the first time, I know I don’t deserve it.  And ironically, it makes me angry.  For the first time in my life, I am not afraid to be angry.  I realize anger is an emotion, that’s all.  And I also know that I have many reasons to be angry – angry that my father died when I was nine; angry that I was never enough for my mother; angry that I spent twenty-four years with a man who made me believe I was worthless.  I deserve to be angry.  It is part of me.  I recognize it; I embrace it; and I let it go.  Anger becomes a monster only if you let it be who you are.  I am not an angry person but I am a person who gets angry.  And that’s OK.

Posted in Change, coping, Daily Life, Depression | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

The Screaming Woman

I have a sick dog right now.  He seems to be doing better on medication but I am having a hard time letting myself be hopeful.  This feels like one more body blow from life that I can’t take right now.

I have a friend, the author Jon Katz, who says he doesn’t want his life to be a struggle story.  I agree.  I don’t want to bemoan all the bad things that have happened, are happening  to me.  I want to live a life of joy and gratitude.  And I have so much to be grateful for.  But sometimes it’s just so damn hard.

I see people around me going through terrible things and doing it with such grace and humor.  I wonder, are they really that enlightened, or are they just showing that face to the world.  In the privacy of their room, do they beat their fists against the wall?

I try very hard to keep that attitude of hopefulness and optimism.  But there is this woman in my head who keeps screaming.  No words, just a long, howling primal scream.  I try to “La la la la” her out of my head.  I yell back “SHUT UP!  SHUT UP! SHUT UP!” I try mantras, prayers, counting my blessings, loving my dogs, quality time with my husband, humming the Pharell Williams’ “Happy” song, watching funny animal videos, walking in nature.  It all works for awhile.  She quiets down a bit.  Sometimes she goes completely silent.  But she’s always there, waiting.  Waiting for that moment when I think I’ve got it all under control; right before the loose gravel under my feet shifts and I start sliding backwards down the mountain.

I’m so tired of her.  She wears me out.  I’ve decided my best defense, my magic potion, is to laugh at her.  To stick my tongue out and say “Go away you silly hag.  Go haunt someone else.”

I’ll let you know if it works.

image

Posted in coping, Daily Life, Depression, Encouragement, Faith, Gratitude, Jon Katz | Tagged , , , | 6 Comments

Grandmother

On Saturday I had a double massage session.  Two hours of sheer bliss.  My body must have know subconsiously that I would be needing extra strenght and stamina in the days to come.

As I lay on the table, I could feel myself floating away.  And I had a vision.  I was standing in front of my tree and I asked her “What do I call you?”

She answered, “I am Grandmother.”

I was filled with a sense of love and protection.   And I knew she had stood there for many years.  Through storms and frigid winters and hot summers and violent winds.  She saw everything and blessed everything.  I knew she was a strong spirit and that I was part of what she blessed.

Then a white wolf stepped out of the trees and said “I am here for you too.  Be brave.”

Visions are a new thing for me.  I believe I have always had them but refused to see them for what they were.  I know, you’re thinking “She’s gone ’round the bend. Visions. Really?”  Why not?  Every holy book there is speaks of visions.  If we accept it in religious literature, why not in life?  The modern world has cocooned itself from the mystical.  We are all about man-made and technology, science and reason.  We have cut ourselves off from the natural world; the world where there are many conduits to the spiritual. We have chosen to ignore what can’t be seen or touched or explained by science.  Yet there are many things today that we accept as true that the science of it’s time denied.

But Grandmother is too strong to be ignored.  Thank you Grandmother.  I honor you and am grateful for your blessing.

Grandmother

Grandmother

Posted in Daily Life, Faith, Gratitude, Love, Mystical, Nature, Spirit, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Bittersweet Hope

I’m exhasted.  I didn’t sleep well last night.  I thought I was ready for this.  I held it together until I picked up Gilligan and put him in the back of the car.  I cried all the way to the vet.  They took me right in.  Nobody wants a sobbing woman carrying a dog wrapped in a towel standing in their waiting room.  The vet tech Karen helped me put him on the table and asked some questions.  I managed to explain what happened in between the tears.  Dr. Jenny came in and we went through it again.  She examined him and checked the reflexes in his legs.  The back right leg had hardly any response.

“What do you think is wrong with him?”

“He has a slight temperature.  Something is definitely going on with his back legs and spine.  He could have a tick borne disease.  That tends to come on fast.  Or it could be just degenerate joint disease.  He is fourteen.  We could do some blood work and that would give us a bit more to go on.”

Choices.  I hate choices.  I wanted the vet to tell me there was nothing that could be done.  I was ready for that.  I had been steeling myself for the past 24 hours.  Now I looked at him lying on the table and there was a question mark hanging over him.

“How long does it take to get the blood results?”

“We do it right here.  I can have it for you in 15 to 20 minutes.  You can stay right in the exam room with him.”

“Ok.  I’d like to know if this is something we can treat or if it is permanent.”

She drew the blood.  He hardly reacted.  I pulled the chair over to the table and put my face near his.  I stroked his head.

“How you doing Booger?  You in pain?  You just not feeling well?  I don’t know what to do.  Remember when you had that vestibular disease?  I thought you were dying then.   I thought you had a stroke.  We fixed it with a little medicine and a little time. Maybe we can do that this time too?   I love you Gilligan.  I love you so much. I thought I was ready for this.  I’m not.  It was easier with Ginger.  We knew she was sick.  And she was so horribly upset when she colapsed.  We knew there was nothing else we could do.  But you just look like my silly old man. Oh Booger, what do I do?

I put my face in his fur and I cried.  And cried.  And told him I love him.  I whispered softly in his ear.  And I waited.  I could hear everything going on outside the exam room. But it was just him and I.  I willed him to give me a sign.  What did he want?  Those 20 minutes took forever and sped by in a flash.  Dr. Jenny came back in.

“Well the good news is there is no tick disease.  He has an elevated white blood cell count but that could be a number of things including inflamation.  His liver and kidney function is perfect.  His heartbeat is a little fast but there is no sign of a murmur.  Everything looks good.”

“So what could it be?”

“We would have to do more tests – Xray, MRI, CT Scan.  That would show any tumor or spine problem.  I don’t feel any tumor and his abdomen palpates well but we wouldn’t know without the tests.  And it could be just that he is fourteen.  Since his kidneys are good, we could put him on steroids and see if that helps at all.”

“If we do that, how quickly would we see progress?”

“Within a few days.”

“What do I do?  I don’t know what to do?”

I knew she couldn’t give me an answer.  But I was lost.  Something I was so sure about an hour before now I couldn’t do.  There was hope, just a bit, that he would improve with medication.  It had worked with Ginger.  We gave her another nine good months before we had to let her go.

“Do you want to think about it?  He’s stable so we don’t have to decide right now.  Do you want to stay here with him for awhile?  Is there someone you want to call?”

“I’d like to call my husband.  My phone is in the car.  I’ll get it and be right back.”

I got my phone and Dr. Jenny left me alone to call Paul.

“How’s Gilligan.”

I couldn’t get it all out without sobbing.

“I don’t know what to do.  I was thinking maybe we should try the steroids and see if they help.  But we can’t leave him like this.  We may only be prolonging it.”

I was quietly praying that my husband would agree.  He is logical and approaches everything like the engineer he is.  He wouldn’t let me do anything that didn’t make sense.

“I agree.  I think that’s the right approach.  We should try.”

I wanted to drop to my knees.

“Ok. Ok. Good.  I’ll tell Dr. Jenny.  If we have to bring him back because they don’t work, at least you will be with me.  I thought I could do this alone but I can’t.  I can’t do it.”

Dr. Jenny got everything together for me; the meds, the instructions and some special dog food to entice him to eat.  Then she carried him out to the car for me.  She wished me luck and told me to call anytime.

So we are home now.  He took the first pill.  I got him to eat a bit and drink.  He still can’t get up.  I just used a towel as a makeshift sling and took him outside to pee.  I’ve been washing towels all day.  Tomorrow I have to go to work,  so he will be alone.  He will get better or he won’t.  I’ve been crying all day.  I talk big about being strong and doing the right thing for my dogs.  And I’ve made some incredibly tough decisions in my life.  But this one is so hard.  And he’s going to be my hard-headed boy to the end.  Never give it to me easy.  I always have to work for it.

Maybe that’s why I love him so much.

image

Posted in Aging, Change, Death, Dogs, Hope | Tagged , | Leave a comment

On Watch

We are on watch today.  We may be losing Gilligan.  My husband found him at the bottom of the stairs this morning.  He was lying in his own pee and couldn’t get up.  We made a bed of towels in the family room and placed him there so we can keep an eye on him.  He doesn’t seem to be in any pain.  He just wants to sleep.  He rallied a little this afternoon.  He drank water and ate some wet food and, with the help of a towel sling, stood up.  My husband carried him outside and he peed.  He wandered around a bit, but he’s down again and hasn’t been able to get up.    We talked about what to do.  We are not taking him to the emergency vet.  Tomorrow, if he makes it through the night, I’ll take him to our vet.  I’ll make th decision then.

I love this dog with all my heart   He made me work for every bit of affection or obedience I ever got.  He is my tough guy, my circus dog.  He could not be contained.  He was smart enough and atheletic enough to get out of any space.

I keep thinking about “Million Dollar Baby”.  He is my Mecushla, my darling.  I’ll break my own heart for him.

My Mecushla

My Mecushla

Posted in Aging, Daily Life, Death, Dogs, Grief, Uncategorized | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

Meeting Betty White

I’m travling with my husband right now.  We are in Phoenix at a conference.  The best thing about this conference is they always have something interesting at their events.  Last night they had  reptile rescue group.  I had the chance to have my photo taken with Betty White.  Betty White is a snake.  For my rocker friends , I should have said I had my picture taken with White Snake.    Same thing. Point is, a few years ago, I would never have done this.   My husband says I look like I’m cuddling a kitten.

I also took a picture with a boa constrictor.  The photographer said I looked so relaxed, so natural.  I told him I think I was an exotic dancer in a past life.

And I petted a water monitor which is a relative of the Komodo Dragon.

This being sixty stuff is way cool.

Betty White

Betty White

imageimage

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

It’s Your Thing

I grew up in a time when our mantra was “Do your own thing”.   We all believed we had the right to live our lives whatever way we wanted.  Ironically, though we lived our lives differently than our parents, we all pretty much followed the same rebellious route.  I thought I was such an individual when I was just another wild child from the seventies.

But something happened this year when I turned sixty.  I started to really not care how others saw me.  I began to do what actually made me happy or comfortable.  Case in point: I hate wearing shoes.  I may have been born a city gal but I have a hillbilly heart.  It’s the end of October.  The temperature was in the 40’s this morning.  Everyone has on their fall footwear i.e., boots.  But I wanted to feel the air on my toes.  So I was the only one on the train platform today wearing sandals.  A small act of defiance but one that made me feel I’d struck a blow for the cause.

It’s your thing.  Do what you want to do.

image

Posted in Aging, Commute, Daily Life | Tagged , , | Leave a comment