On the X-ray, they looked like coins of various denominations scattered throughout his lungs. A penny here. Two dimes. A fat nickel. Tumors, the vet said. A lot of them.
I didn’t really take him in expecting a diagnosis of that nature. Cancer? Jesus. I took him in because his hip problems were worsening. He wasn’t making it up the steps as much. As a shepherd dog, he likes to be with the herd, with his peeps, and now with wobbly hips he couldn’t be with us as much. Was no longer as easy to slumber near me as I do my morning writing or come upstairs and sleep by our door at night. It frustrated him and so he’d sit at the bottom of the steps and bark at us.
“Hey. Hey! Hey. Hey. HEY. I want to come up there but I can’t and so I’m saying hey.”
I noticed that his barks were hoarse. Like they didn’t have enough air to them. Plus, at night he’d sometimes make these unproductive gagging noises. Not quite coughs. A persistent hairball.
And then, the panting. Not always, not even often, but sometimes he’d pant fast and shallow.
Vet said, let’s X-ray.
And so, lung cancer.
Fuck cancer, of course.
Fuck cancer right in its canker-sore-encircled ass.
I am tired of cancer stealing away the ones I love.
Some day, cancer, I suspect we will do battle.
The old shepherd — a Belgian shepherd, or Groenendael — is 13, now. Not a young buck by any means. Knew that one day sooner than later the time would come that something would befall him. It’s part of the deal when you get a dog. Not like getting a parrot. Parrots might as well be vampires for as long as you’ll have them. You buy a pup, though, you know that time is ticking down. Faster than you’d ever like. It’s like George Carlin says: life is just a series of dogs.
I got Yaga when I was in college. He was just a fuzzy little knucklehead back then. I had no idea the terror he would be as a puppy or how woefully unprepared I was to handle a dog of his needs. We’d always had dogs growing up, but I didn’t take care of them by myself. So, it came and went that I instilled a lot of bad habits in him not really knowing any better. He got shut of most of those habits by the time he was maybe three years old, and as I grew up I guess so did he. I wasn’t a great owner, but I got better at it. Made mistakes, but I guess none bad enough to diminish the old boy’s boundless enthusiasm and sweet, doofusy love he offers to anybody who walks in the door. Even now with hip problems and lung cancer and god-knows-what-else wrong with him (Lupus? Dogbola?) he seems without compunction or fear. Most times he wags his tail and still has that vacant, goggle-eyed look he’s so good at giving. Like, you know, this one.
I’ve recited this litany before, but I repeat it because it continues to astound:
He should be dead by now.
He’s eaten table legs, linoleum, a Playstation controller. He ate an audio tape and so I had to leash him to a stop sign while out for a walk and pull a whole reel of audio tape from his butt with makeshift paper towel gloves (my neighbors watched). He ate a big box of rat poison. He ate dark chocolate truffles and threw it up on my heating vents in winter (so when the heat came on, you first smelled hot chocolate and, seconds later, hot bile). He had a cancerous growth on his paw. He had Lyme Disease, but only showed sickness when he started taking the Lyme meds. He was attacked by a bull elk, thrown up again and again against a chain link fence by the elk’s prodigious antlers. He saved me from a fire in my double-wide trailer.
Heck, just a couple weeks ago he fell down the steps. Tried climbing up, couldn’t, and rolled back down.
Was utterly unfazed.
He constantly bangs his head into countertops and table-corners.
Again, unfazed.
He’s a tough cookie, but I don’t think this is one battle he can win.
Age is a tireless opponent, especially when cancer is its weapon.
The vet doesn’t know how long he’s got. He refused to speculate because, while the tumors look bad, the dog barely shows any signs of being affected. Could be weeks. Could be months. Could even be days. The hope is that he’ll go slow and peacefully. No cancer is pleasant, but sometimes lung cancer affords its victims the luxury of dying in their sleep. But if it gets bad, we’ll have to take him somewhere. Growing up on the farm, my father always did the euthanizing himself. A lot of our dogs met their end at the end of a gun. Sounds barbaric, and maybe it was, but that’s life on a farm. It was rare to see my father cry, but talking about dogs past was one way to make that happen.
As many have said wisely, it would be a poor effort to mourn the old boy before he’s gone, and so we have taken to spoiling him with tons of treats and foods which would normally be a luxury. The vet said we were good to have him groomed, too, so he’s now all pretty, which is why everyone always calls him “her.”
“She’s so beautiful!” people say.
And I say yes, yes he is.
Lisa Kilian says:
Oh man. I am so sorry.
But what a great post. I’ve teared up and hugged my cat tight. It’s always such a sad thing, knowing you’ll outlive them.
March 17, 2011 — 12:07 AM
Ashley says:
Now you’ve got me a little worried. Sounds like the same symptoms my 12 year old collie is exhibiting, although the hacking and weak bark aren’t new. We can also relate with the hip problems. She has arthritis that’s growing worse with age, of course.
Poor thing. Hopefully he’ll live a lot longer yet. I bet you’ve already made his 13 years here a blast.
March 17, 2011 — 12:31 AM
Tim says:
So sorry, Chuck. Enjoy every moment.
March 17, 2011 — 12:42 AM
CelinaMac says:
Thanks for sharing this. I also have a 14 year old poodle (she doesn’t fit any dainty poodle stereotype except for being smart!). She has large urinary stones and elevated liver enzymes because of it. She’s a family dog, but then she picked me and would always follow me and wait for me, so for the last 7 years she’s been more close to me. It feels more like I belong to her than she belonging to me.
For the past decade, I’ve experience several close friends leaving to find better paying jobs in another country. I stayed here and moved from one job to another and if not for her, her tail wagging, her daily welcomes, her goofy looks, her insistence that I take her out for a walk and literally take some time to ‘smell’ every living thing in the garden, I would have been clinically depressed or engaged in manic drinking.
Like your dog, her illness is serious (she has some bleeding) but you would not know it with how perky she still is when it’s time to walk her out.
So will take your lead not to mourn my impending loss but to pay more attention to giving my girl the things she loves—ear scratches, back massages, and car rides so she can feel the wind on her face.
March 17, 2011 — 1:25 AM
shree says:
🙁 I’m sorry to hear that.
It sucks when a pet has to pass on. For me, it even more crummier when its a doggie, because dog to me are just *so* beautiful and loving and loyal and firendly and lovable…
We lost our mini Shnautzer to lymphoma 2 years ago 🙁 Rusty was such a sweet, sweet dog and worse he was so young, only 4 years old …
I’m glad that your dog has a loving family that’s pampering it and loving it on its last legs. When he does get to doggy heaven be assured that he’ll be having the time of his life 🙂
March 17, 2011 — 2:16 AM
KDJames says:
We call our black lab, Quincy, The Wonder Dog. Not because he’s wonderful (even though he is) but because we wonder how he’s managed to live this long. I’ve seen him eat rocks. An Easter basket of full of foil-wrapped chocolate. An entire box of tampons. I once read an article in the paper listing toxic-to-pets garden plants and realized he’d eaten half of them. I own stock in carpet cleaning products and dread the day he might need a stomach x-ray and they’ll report me to the ASPCA. Idiot dog.
But I’ve been there too with the cancer. Baxter, also a black lab, was twelve when he developed a cancerous tumor on his spine. Inoperable. Toward the end he lost the use of his back legs and we’d wrap a towel under him like a sling and lift up the back end so he could go outside under the power of his front legs and do his business. Shortly after that it became apparent he was experiencing horrible pain. Labs are big tough dogs and pretty much impervious to pain. He’d stand for an hour, leaning up against the wall, because it hurt too much to move to lie down. That was intolerable. He was such a good dog. The best ever. Never once ate a rock. And even though you know you’re doing the right thing, the humane thing, it just destroys you make that decision and to see the absolute love and trust in those big brown eyes right up until the end. Almost as bad as seeing the pain and disillusionment in the eyes of your kids who have always depended on your ability to right all the wrongs in their world.
Anyway. Hugs and love to both you and Yaga. You’re lucky to have had each other. That’s no small thing.
March 17, 2011 — 2:23 AM
j. webb says:
Thank you so much for sharing this. I’m going through some tough times with my 9 year old lab right now and she doesn’t have cancer (as far as we know), but it is making me more aware of everything about her right now. I’m glad your pup is being clueless about the situation – it makes it so much easier for us to handle. Mine does the same thing. I hope the time you have left is really great. =)
March 17, 2011 — 2:59 AM
Sprogblogger says:
I am so very sorry. Only thing wrong with dogs is they never EVER live long enough. No matter how long you have with them, it’s never long enough. Thinking of you & your beautiful boy today.
March 17, 2011 — 7:05 AM
Maria Zannini says:
I’m so sorry, Chuck. If it helps at all, we put our dog on a high protein diet. No carbs. We had read somewhere that cancer seem to thrive on carbs. I don’t know if that’s true, but we were willing to move heaven and earth. She beat cancer twice.
And yes, he is very beautiful–and very loved.
March 17, 2011 — 7:07 AM
Karla says:
I’m so sorry. What a wonderful post this is and I thank you for letting me get to know him a bit.
March 17, 2011 — 7:32 AM
JD Rhoades says:
I’m sorry, Chuck. I know how hard it is.
I hope his crossing is an easy one, but if you have to make the hard choice, remember this: they give us so many gifts, and the last one we can give them is mercy.
March 17, 2011 — 7:38 AM
Rick A. Carroll says:
Harsh, man. My advice? Take your dog and hit an adventure before you don’t have any time left. Get in the car, slick you bald spot back, and pin Yaga’s ears up. Hit whatever doggie-vegas is. Drink the the fire hydrant, run down a few black cats, and find some lose bitches. The two of you go out and have some fun hardcore.
Or, if you have access, go camping. Maybe not as glamorous as licking Alpo off some skanky Poodle, but it’s still an adventure.
March 17, 2011 — 7:38 AM
terribleminds says:
Thanks, all.
@JD: Mercy, indeed. Not that I am in any way looking forward to that day of mercy, but what’s sad to me is that we never have a way to offer that mercy to people, or really even to ourselves.
@Rick: He is unfortunately past too many adventures, I think. Getting him in the car with his hips is a bit of an exercise. His favorite thing during a car ride is, no surprise, sticking his head out the window and it broke my heart that he really couldn’t get himself up to do it — but then, at the tail end of the drive, he managed to sit up for about two good minutes and once more thrust his mug out the window and pretend, as I suspect all dogs do, that he was flying.
@All: Sorry to hear about your many dogs. Again, for dog-owners, life is just a series of dogs. We do it because dogs are awesome.
— c.
March 17, 2011 — 7:46 AM
Ben says:
Chuck, first off, I want to express my sympathies. There’s something utterly inhuman about a person who can’t feel sadness for a dog (or any pet for that matter) getting sick or passing on.
Second of all, thank you so much for sharing. Many times with people, it’s the pets that really see the intensely personal side of us, the side that we are sometimes scared to show other people.
Thirdly (is that really even a word? Really?), you bring up the uncomfortable fact that all pet owners (well, except for those damn parrots) have to eventually face. We had a cat that we had to put down at two years of age because of bladder problems. Too fucking young. My wife also has a Sheltie that just turned two this week. This dog is an ESA (emotional support animal) that she needed to get because of some issues she has with depression and I work nights. I think he’s sometimes more human than I am. There have been many nights she’s held him tight and fretting over the day she’s going to have to say goodbye for a real forever, and not just a puppy forever of you stepping out to check on the clothes in the dryer.
Anywho, before I REALLY start rambling, here’s my sincere condolences and even more sincere hopes that Yaga is able to go peacefully in his sleep surrounded by his herd that he’s taken care of for the past 13 years.
Finally, I know what you mean completely when you talk about the dog being “pretty.” Antilles gets called a “she” by everyone on a constant basis, including my father-in-law. Antilles on the other hand will insist vehemently that he’s “handsome.”
March 17, 2011 — 8:05 AM
Danielle says:
Now I’m all teary-eyed.
The thing with your dad reminded me of when we had to put the family cat down. He got sick very suddenly, and they couldn’t figure out what was wrong with him. He would just keep throwing up, he couldn’t keep anything down for like a week. He lost 3 or 4 pounds.
I think I was 17 at the time? I wasn’t living at home (I moved out young), but I stayed the night before he died. He’d just come home from the vet and they couldn’t figure out what was wrong, but they said he hadn’t thrown up in a while. When he threw up as soon as he got home, we knew his days were numbered. When I woke up the next morning my parents said Dad took him to the vet to be put down. I don’t think I’ve ever seen my dad cry any other time.
They may be small tragedies waiting to happen, but I just don’t think life would the same without pets.
March 17, 2011 — 8:11 AM
Danielle says:
I got so wrapped up in my story and feeling sad I forgot to offer my sympathies. I’m quite the asshole, I know.
I hope you’re doing all right, all things considered.
March 17, 2011 — 8:13 AM
Jennifer Lynn says:
My deepest sympathies Chuck. I too, hope that your doggie, when it is his time, passes on peacefully and surrounded by loved ones. I’m in nearly the same position with a cat (mouth cancer), and am waiting for word back as to whether his out of state treatment (an amazing stroke of luck to find it) was successful. If it wasn’t, I get to do the unknown countdown as well. In the meantime, will spoil the hell out of him.
March 17, 2011 — 8:35 AM
Marjorie Liu says:
What a handsome, wonderful, friend in fur. I won’t give my condolences, because he’s not gone yet — and, it seems, he has the lives of a cat — but I will say that you’re very lucky to have spent time with such a big-hearted buddy. Many hugs, and much love.
March 17, 2011 — 8:39 AM
Rebecca J Fleming says:
I’m so sorry to hear about your poor doggy 🙁 My friends think I overreact to stories of animals being hurt/sick etc, but I can’t help it; especially dogs, who are just so loyal and friendly that it’s impossible not to love them. Last year we found a stray dog in front of our house that had been hit by a car and we took it to the vet, but nothing could be done to save it, so it had to be put down. The dog kept getting upset when I tried to leave so I sat with it until it was gone, and I was an emotional wreck for a week afterwards. And a few times over the years we’ve almost lost our own dog through various illnesses and injuries (a German Shepherd who is the most loving goofball you could imagine) and each time left me feeling physically ill at the thought of him not being there wagging his tail every time I come home from uni, or headbutting me in the armpit when I’m writing and not paying attention to him.
Yaga looks like a gorgeous, cheerful boy. When he does eventually go to doggy heaven, at least he’ll be able to say he’s had a happy life.
*sends Yaga a virtual doggy hug*
March 17, 2011 — 8:41 AM
Josh says:
Another Carlin-ism, “You’re buying a small tragedy. You’re supposed to know this in the pet store.”
I know you’ll do right by your dog until the very end. We’re all here for you.
March 17, 2011 — 8:49 AM
Matt says:
He’s beautiful. I hope you guys will be able to make his last days as enjoyable as you can. I hope you too can face this situation with as much courage as possible.
My thoughts are with you guys and Yaga.
March 17, 2011 — 8:56 AM
Charlie Logan says:
Sorry to hear the news. There’s nothing like a dog’s love and companionship. I wish him peace and good times with you and the rest of his family.
March 17, 2011 — 9:03 AM
Brandy says:
My sincere sympathies go out to you, and I hope that you get more time to shower Yaba with every ounce of love you can give. I had a similar experience with my 11 year old lab mix last year. Many of the same symptoms – wheezing, slight cough, occassional panting at random times. She’d slowed down considerably, but there was a pronounced, and what felt like very sudden, change to her energy level and her demeanor. The cancer diagnosis was not unexpected, but certainly unwelcome. As it was, my dear old dog had a host of other health problems, and her prognosis was such that I made the decision then and there to allow her to go with dignity and as little pain as possible, with me there to offer what little comfort and reassurance I was able through my absolute heartwrenching sorrow in her last few minutes. It’s the price we pay for the love of our pets, that their lives are shockingly brief. I like to think that their lifespans are short because their love is concentrated and intense, so that it burns them out faster. And anyone who can look into the face of a well-loved, happy dog and claim that animals don’t have some kind of “soul” is a damned fool.
March 17, 2011 — 9:03 AM
Brandy says:
*Yaga. Can’t see the keys on my keyboard through the tears. :'(
March 17, 2011 — 9:05 AM
Athena McCormick says:
This made me cry. I’ve been there and I know there isn’t really anything that can be said to make it any easier. The important thing is that he knows you love him, which I’m absolutely sure he does. My thoughts are with you ♥
March 17, 2011 — 9:09 AM
Kate Haggard says:
He’s a gorgeous boy! He should look evil with his extremely reddish eyes, but he just look happy. I hope he sticks it out long enough to meet the little man and give you a few more happy pictures to keep.
March 17, 2011 — 9:11 AM
Shadow Freak says:
This sucks. I am sorry.
I know how you feel. In september, I adopted two baby cats. By november, one of them got hurt. He trapped one of his paws somewhere. By the time I got home, his paw was three times bigger then usual: the blood flow had been stopped. I took him to the vet and the only answer was: we’ll know in about two weeks if we’ll have to cut the paw or not. And the operation cost around 1000$. As a student, I can’t afford that.
So I’ve lived around two weeks not knowing if my new baby cat was going to die or not. I admit it: I cried. In the end, he was all fine, but I know how you feel.
All I can say is enjoy your time with him. Make these times sweet memories that you’ll remember when you won’t even remember your own name. Do with him what you would do with your best friend. After all, that’s what he is right? He has been with you all those years, so be with him like he did with you.
Again, I am sorry.
March 17, 2011 — 9:12 AM
Kevin Fenton says:
Spoil that dog. He’s awesome.
March 17, 2011 — 9:16 AM
Jess Tudor says:
He’s a handsome guy. I hope you can enjoy however long he has left with you and that when it happens it’s peaceful.
March 17, 2011 — 9:23 AM
Tony Noland says:
My sympathies. A few years ago, I had the the luxury (if you can call it that) of a dog who died suddenly, sparing me the necessity of the final act of pet ownership. I’ll always regard that as the final gift from a dog who was good right to the end.
Best wishes to you and your pup.
March 17, 2011 — 9:38 AM
Peter Hentges says:
What I take away from your touching story is that you raised a good dog. Early failures corrected to leave a loving result. I suspect your forthcoming son will benefit from this experience.
Also, that it’s probably a good thing the old dog is so prone to accident. Sounds like he’d be an immortal terror beast if the mishaps hadn’t slowed him down.
March 17, 2011 — 9:40 AM
Christine Rose says:
What a beautiful post, Chuck. I certainly can empathize. My 15-yr-old AussieX has the exact same symptoms. I know it won’t be long, but I cherish every moment with her.
She’s my girl.
Nothing can really ease the pain of loss, but know you are not alone. I’ll now think of you and Yaga every time I kiss Bronte’s big ol’ nose.
xo
March 17, 2011 — 9:56 AM
Dan O'Shea says:
Chuck —
I’m so sorry to hear about your dog, man. We had to put out last dog down five years back now. Here’s what I wrote about it at the time. And, of course, a year after I wrote this, we had another dog. Dante’s still practically a pup, and I don’t even want to think about where or what I’ll be by the time his clock winds down, if I’m even still around. But that’s the point. Dogs, with there complete fealty, unalloyed love and complete, goofy canine presentness, they’re the perfect innoculation against pointless, narcissistic navel gazing. Anyway, maybe this helps, maybe it makes things worse, but it’s what I got.
I deal with things by writing about them – processing, my wife calls it. She’s
a therapist. They use words like that. She thinks I should talk about things
more. She thinks the give and take of conversation helps clarify things. I
don’t. I find the discipline of writing – the effort of trying to find the
right words instead of just enough words – that’s what finally sets things in my
mind. Until I do, things tend to fester under my mental skin like boils until I
lance them with language.
When I read about Tony losing his cat, my dog’s death, which has been festering
away unresolved, erupted back into my consciousness, and now it won’t leave me
alone.
We had to put Shakespeare down in September. He had an abdominal tumor that had
grown nearly to the size of a watermelon by the end. In the last month, his
behavior became problematic and unpredictable. The week after Labor Day, I was
traveling for work when my wife called. Shakespeare was chewing on his foreleg
to the point where he was drawing blood. My wife and our two kids who were home
took Shakespeare to the vet and they didn’t him back.
I’ve had dogs before – my whole life, really. They’ve died before. The first
died a lingering death when I was 15. The second was hit by a car. The third I
put down my self. Each time, it was difficult, but each time it felt like a
hard but natural part of the order of things. I don’t know why it doesn’t now.
Maybe it’s this – when we adopted Shakespeare from the shelter, I was 33. My
kids were babies, really. We hadn’t yet learned that my son Nick was Autistic,
or that my other son had Asperger’s Syndrome. I was two years into freelancing,
and the business was growing. I was, unbeknownst to me, nearing the apex of
what had, until that point in my life, been a relatively easy and predictable
upward path.
Now, I’m pushing 50. My business is gone, and I’ve descended into wage slavery
– it pays well and it turns out I’m good at it, but getting on the train every
morning still feels like be shackled into the belly of a galley. My wife and I
are trying to find some safe harbor for our Autistic son, but know that, once we
die, his well being and even his dignity will hinge largely on the fickle
beneficence of the State.
My father continues his torturous denouement. In the past couple of years, I’ve
witnessed his transformation from one of the most energetic, intelligent and
caring men I’ve known into a fragile, eroded husk, struggling to breathe and
hoping to die. This past week he had yet another cardiac event. When he
regained consciousness in the ER, his first words were “Damn it. I really
didn’t want to survive another one of these.”
I’ve been to three wakes in the last month. A woman I’ve know since
kindergarten came home a few weeks ago to find that her husband – a guy I’ve
played golf and poker with for years who always seemed stable enough, happy
enough, had spread a tarp on the floor of the garage and shot himself. A guy
from my high school class blew out an artery in his brain and slumped to the
conference room table in the middle of a meeting, dead. A friend of my
daughter’s was running late for band practice one morning and tried to pass one
car too many – the same marginally reckless crap I pulled all the time at 17,
but I never paid with my life. So mortality has been on my mind – mortality and
all the bad shit that happens before then.
So maybe it’s this. With one dog, I grew from an infant into a teen. The other
lasted only a couple years, but they were those years at the end of high school
and the beginning of college where the emotional and intellectual baby fat gets
burned away and you become most of what you will be. The third was there for
the end of that process and the first years of my marriage – it watched me
become a man. I had Shakespeare longer than any other them – almost as long as
my children, more than half of my marriage. When we adopted Shakespeare, I was
young. Now I am not.
When my other dogs died, I always had a new dog in a month or two. We don’t
have a new dog yet, and I’m not sure when or if we will. My daughter wants one,
badly. Our reasons are sound enough – we have to travel a lot to see our son,
and I travel a lot for work, and my daughter will be going to college in a year
and won’t be home, so a dog would spend too much time alone or in kennels.
But I think the real reason might be this. In another 15 years, I’ll be into my
60s. And I’ll watch another dog die, one way or another. We’re not a long
lived family. I don’t have a grandparent that made it to 65. My mother was dead
before 70. My dad will never make 80, and probably wishes he hadn’t made it
this far. Heart disease, diabetes, high blood pressure, cancer – every risk
factor you can think of festoons my family tree like Eve’s apple. I’m only a
dog or two away from the grave. I’ll see the movie soon enough. I guess I just
don’t feel like watching the previews anymore.
Dan
March 17, 2011 — 10:14 AM
Jus Accardo says:
I just gotta say, don’t lose hope. I had the EXACT same thing happen with my GSD mix. She went in for something else, and they saw her lungs were FULL of tumors. I can still see the x-rays in my mind. I was sick. But, she showed no signs of any major issue. Still happy and on the move all the time.
The vet said it wouldn’t be long, but she proved them wrong. She stayed with me for over three years.
He’s a beautiful guy. I’m so sorry you have to go through this 🙁
March 17, 2011 — 10:20 AM
AndiM says:
Oh, geez. I am so sorry. My dog, Taylor, is a shepherd mix who’s around 13 or 14. I don’t know, because I found her on the side of a road 13 years ago and the vet wasn’t sure how old she was. She’s got pretty bad hip problems now and last year she had a battle with cancer that she seems to have won. She keeps right on being the awesome dog she’s always been, and until she tells me she’s tired of it or checks out on her own, she’s living out a retirement from security detail, squirrel chaser, dog cop at the dog park, and official tester of goose poo, because all that was part of her self-imposed duties. So I wish all of you the best, and I’m getting kind of weepy now, thinking about your dog and his diagnosis. Thanks for the reminder, too, about not mourning him before he’s gone.
Best to all of you.
March 17, 2011 — 11:05 AM
Colleen Lindsay says:
I’m so sorry, Chuck.
I went through a similar thing once with a cat I had named BJ (for Brat, Jr.). She was born in my lap, and five short years later, she died in my lap, ravaged by pancreatic cancer. But those five years were wonderful, and I wouldn’t have traded them for anything.
These days I look at my cat Stinkyboy, who is now 14, and I wonder how long I’ll have him with me. Because it does sneak up on you, ya know?
Hugs to you and your awesome pooch, my friend. =)
March 17, 2011 — 11:05 AM
Laura K Curtis says:
I am crying like a baby. I have one in the same kind of shape — 14 years old, 3/4 blind, partially deaf, has had four cancer surgeries in the last two years including a splenectomy and part of her liver removed — but she’s the Timex watch of dogs. She takes a licking and keeps on ticking. I know the day is coming soon, and now every time I have to take her in I am sure it is the last time. It terrifies me.
Love your pup, hang on, and enjoy your lives together while you can.
March 17, 2011 — 11:08 AM
AmyLikesToDraw says:
I’m sorry, bud. My condolences on the prognosis – reading this post hit me close. It got me all melancholy and reminiscent of my old pup Scruffy. It’s pretty much how he went too. He was the short-haired black-lab mutt version of yours, too (went at 17 from cancer).
A consolation, hopefully: They had amazing, happy, joyful lives being a loved part of the family. Now he’s old, happy, and knows you all love him and will spend your days being awesome together until the end. What better way to go could there be?
I raise a glass to the pups today.
March 17, 2011 — 11:11 AM
Ali says:
Well, crap on a stick. This made me teary. I can relate to a lot of what you wrote here, on so many levels.
Your dog reminds me a lot of mine, personality-wise. He’s a German Shepherd, but he’s only a puppy. Nearly seven months. He runs into walls, tries (and sometimes succeeds) to eat rocks, wood, pine tree branches. He slides into walls when chasing a ball. I suspect he think he’s like Tigger and will bounce. He shakes it off, and then finishes bounding after the ball.
Last fall, I had to put my then-dog to sleep. It was sudden, and it sucked. It’s hard to go through that, even when you know you’ll have to when you get a dog. Or a cat. Parrots as vampires? Love the comparision.
I am sorry that you’re going through this — but it sounds like your dog’s as lucky to have you as you are him. Spoil away.
March 17, 2011 — 11:11 AM
Damien Walters Grintalis says:
Chuck, I am so very sorry. He is beautiful. No matter how long they live, it’s never long enough. I’m sending a virtual scratch behind the ears for Yaga.
March 17, 2011 — 11:12 AM
Jamie Wyman says:
Sorry to hear Yaga’s having problems. He’s a gorgeous boy and seems like an amazing friend. Hug the hell out of him, man. Love him and let him enjoy time with his pack.
Fuck cancer.
March 17, 2011 — 11:20 AM
Michele DeFilippo says:
So very sorry. Hope you enjoy every moment you have left with him.
March 17, 2011 — 11:38 AM
Nikki Barnabee says:
I’m so sorry to hear that your beautiful (and wonderfully goofy) Yaga was given that awful diagnosis. I went through the same thing with my cat, Scully. I took her to the vet thinking she had a bad tooth, and instead it was a tumor under her tongue. Such a shock, that changes everything when your pet has been an integral part of your life for years and years (Scully, more than 8 yrs) and someone says that it’s all coming to an end. For me, it’s been more than 4 months and there are still times when I think maybe it was just a bleak dream and when i wake up everything will be back to normal.
Hopefully, Yaga will have many symptom-free months, and you can spoil him rotten and enjoy the affection he gives back to you. That won’t make it any less painful or any more fair, but I hope the time goes slowly for you both. Thanks for sharing Yaga’s story with us. He sounds awesome and lovable and just the best!
March 17, 2011 — 11:44 AM
David Sobkowiak says:
Dammit Chuck. Just dammit. I’m glad you have had the years with him. Enjoy the time you have left. Dammit.
March 17, 2011 — 11:57 AM
Laura Lorenzana says:
Condolences on the diagnosis. Life’s balance sucks sometimes, doesn’t it? How crazy is it that at the time in your life you’re celebrating the impending birth of your child, you also have to gird yourself for the impending loss of a family member? *Sigh*
As all the other pet owners here have said, we know when we get them that they’ll (most likely) die before we do; that we’ll see their life arc from beginning to end. Sometimes, the arc is steeper and sometimes it’s pretty low to the ground. My two kitty boys, officially termed ‘beige American shorthair’ were, well, my boys. Got them the day I got out of the hospital, coming home to a recently-vacated by the soon-to-be ex-husband condo in a high-rise, thinking how cool it would be to have someone to come home to that didn’t yell at me constantly. The irony, of course, was they yelled in their own way, letting me know their displeasure when I wasn’t there to provide for their every whim. But I did. And they loved me, unconditionally. When they were a spry 13, we (the new hubby and I) moved out to cow country; into a house with 2 floors and stairs and grass and so many things they’d never seen in their lives. They were renewed, invigorated; they learned to follow me out to get the newspaper in the morning, the joy of peeing on my little ornamental spruce tree in the front yard (to its detriment), and the complete bliss of laying on a warm patio in the sunshine while I worked in the garden. But life ends. For all of us, life ends. So, the day came that I had to make the decision to end one of my boys suffering, for he was suffering. At six months shy of his 19th birthday, we drove him to the vet and, while he continued to show his trust and love, we did what was best for him. His brother, who’d always been just a tad bit slow, kindly waited until we were away on an emergency trip to pass gently away in his sleep, just a month shy of his 19th birthday.
They were, and continue to be a joy. You’ll never forget your boy, and as many others have said, cherish the goofy, dopey moments you have with him. He’s a beautiful boy. And he always will be.
March 17, 2011 — 12:08 PM
ChiaLynn says:
What a gorgeous boy. Like JD, I hope his passing is peaceful.
I’ve never had a dog of my own, though there were plenty of family dogs. Two of them, Tam the Sheltie and Dodi the Toy Poodle, were even supposed to be mine – but every dog we ever had was really my Dad’s. Dodi died in her sleep. Tam keeled over chasing a car – he never did catch one.
As an adult, I had cats. Four of them, at one point. I had the last one put to sleep in 2009, and I haven’t gotten another. My husband’s allergic to cats, and that’s part of it, but another part is that every time I look at a kitten, I see the end of its life as well, and I’m not ready to face that yet.
http://www.artoftheodd.com/yet-another-goodbye/564
March 17, 2011 — 12:18 PM
Julia March says:
I’m so sorry. I have 2 Belgians and I love them more I’ve ever loved any people except my son.
They are such hellhounds, aren’t they? Amazing any of them ever survives puppyhood. I hope it goes easy for him at the very end.
March 17, 2011 — 1:20 PM
Jennifer says:
Everyone else already wrote everything.
I just wanted to say that he’s one outstanding specimen of animal. Absolutely gorgeous and regal in that first shot. Beautiful!
March 17, 2011 — 1:22 PM
Shawn R says:
You have my sympathies. Been there a few times. Expect to be there again more times than I care to anticipate, but the years of their life & the joy they bring are worth the grief that inevitably comes.
March 17, 2011 — 4:39 PM
Scott Walker says:
We lost our 6 year old Maltese to coyotes one Sunday night three years back. Not sure which is worse: a sudden loss or the long goodbye.
Either way, losing a pet sucks.
My heart goes out to you, Chuck…
March 17, 2011 — 11:22 PM
Stephen Blackmoore says:
To say I’m sorry, or to offer condolences just doesn’t seem like enough.
No matter how often it happens we’re never ready to lose the ones we love.
I have two dogs, Angus and Emma, who, considering the sort of shit they’ve eaten (the kitchen floor, a metric fuckton of rose bushes) and had (parvo and pancreatitis) I wonder how they’ve managed to survive out of puppyhood.
They’re my first dogs. They’re sweet, and they love, and they drive me absolutely batshit. Like, “Why the fuck did I get a fucking dog fuckfuckfuck” kind of crazy. But then they do something goofy and all is forgiven.
Well, mostly.
Angus we got from a breeder and Emma was an unexpected addition when my wife called me from a petstore where they were doing adoptions, opening with the phrase, “Don’t be mad.”
I’m really not looking forward to the day that they go, which, gods willing, won’t be for a good, long time.
But then we never get to choose, do we?
The best we can do for them is give them good lives and make them happy, I suppose. Keep them as comfortable and happy as we can in their last days. Lots of treats and bellyrubs.
May his passing be a long time coming and gentle when it gets here.
March 17, 2011 — 11:54 PM