Tai was our little taco terrier.
A taco terrier is — well, yes, a terrier that will eat tacos, but also a dog that is part chihuahua and part terrier. In this case, part toy fox terrier, or so we were told. (Sometimes they’re called chitoxies, but as that does not contain the word “taco,” it is plainly inferior.)
My wife and I bought Tai when she was a pot-bellied little pup. We bought her from a pet store at a time we were naive enough to think that most pet stores didn’t source their animals from puppy farms. We bought her from a time when my wife wasn’t even my wife — when in fact we did not even live with one another and shared her briefly between houses.
We were young and dumb. Puppies ourselves. Everybody told us not to buy her. Why would we? My wife and I hadn’t been together all that long but we knew this dog was our dog from the moment we picked her up and she climbed all over us, not demanding pink belly rubs so much as forcibly rubbing her belly wherever she could. Snortling and snorfling. So we took her home and hurried out and bought all the canine accoutrements and everyone rolled their eyes at us wondering how long any of it would last. But our doggy did last, and I eventually married my wife, and our taco terrier was a part of our family from the moment we laid eyes on her.
Tai was pugnacious, but sweet.
She owned any big dog she came in contact with. She would bite them on the lip. And this small but powerful action would allow her to rule even the largest dogs.
(She did not trust little dogs.)
She was reluctant best buddies with our last dog, Yaga. They were like a mismatched cop team. He was blissfully ignorant as she groused at him. But her disdain of the big lunkhead was a lie — they ate together and she waited for him outside so they could pee together and they were pals.
When he died, I think she was a little bit heartbroken. This, the chihuahua curse, and a part of her that overruled her terrier components: a chihuahua often only bonds with a few others. A couple-few humans, maybe one other dog, and that was it. Yaga died and Tai never seemed quite right after. She lost a step. Our son being born and our new dog, Loa, failed to lend her any energy — and while she tolerated Loa and accepted petting and cuddling from our boy, she never really connected with either of them.
Still, she was curious and funny and weird.
She snored so loud that if you were upstairs, you could feel it in the floorboards coming from downstairs. Like a dragon sleeping on its hoard of gold.
She barked in her sleep. Little yips.
(Plus, she could basically sleep anywhere.)
She liked to lay with her back against you and her belly out toward the world.
For rubbings, of course. The sweet canine currency of belly rubbings.
She was stubborn as anything. Nearly impossible to move. For a small dog, she was basically a mountain attached to a leash — you went where she went, and not the reverse.
She was totally nosy. A major busy-body, this one. Give her a window and a perch and she will watch every neighborhood argument, every cat, every squirrel, every crankhead and mailman.
For such a small dog — and for such a stumpy loaf of bread — she loved the snow and navigated it like a dolphin. A furry, bitey dolphin.
(Though sometimes she looked more like a baby seal than a dolphin, truth be told.)
At our new house, she liked to climb up on the mound in our backyard and bark at distant, unseen neighbors. Or chime in at the goings-on of rustling deer. (Nosy even with woodland creatures.)
She could make tons of funny faces.
I like to think she was a happy dog, cantankerous and cranky as she could be.
Thing is, she was also sick a lot of her life. Not dramatically so, but she was prone to allergies — early on she was basically tearing herself apart, stripping off her fur and biting herself raw, and when the vet called after many tests to read us the list of allergens, it was a five minute voicemail. I didn’t know that many kinds of grasses even existed. So, we put her on a wonder drug called Atopica, but the not-so-wonderous part of that drug was that it reduced her immune response which left her prone to opportunistic infections (usually in her ears).
Still, it allowed us to sometimes dress her in a hilarious clown collar:
Recently, though, she’d begun to suffer the effects of what seemed to be IBD/Colitis — a severe thickening of the small intestine made it very hard for her to absorb food or even get hydrated, and so she started drinking a lot and having accidents. The vet confirmed the diagnosis but suggested there could be more at play — there, that specter of cancer (and speak the refrain with me: fuck cancer) and all the while, she was wasting away and we were losing control of the situation. We tried everything. Our house became a pet biocontainment unit. We tried food, meds, ran tests, spent lots of money (her health problems throughout her life probably caused us to spend the rough equivalent of a cheaper new car — worth it, which is why we spent it).
We were at our wit’s end.
It was only recently that I’d found folks online that had luck with Atopica controlling their pets’ IBD, and so I dug out our old meds (thankfully not expired) and tried those.
We had her scheduled to be put down last week.
But literally at the last minute, she finally started to show improvement.
And we had about four or five days of steady, meaningful improvement.
The last couple days, though, she started to go back downhill again. Her face began to twitch — we suspected a calcium deficiency but the vet said it was suggestive of seizures that themselves suggested brain involvement of what may be cancer. (IBD can be caused by cancer or can be the cause of it.) The Atopica had worked, but only temporarily, it seemed. We were losing her.
We didn’t know why.
But there comes a point when it seems cruel to let them continue. A mercy humans aren’t really allowed, but one that we can reserve for our beloved animals — the ability to take them away from the pain before it overwhelms them. It’s hard to know when to do this, and even now I’m bawling my eyes out thinking, but we could’ve tried one more thing. But so it goes. She was reduced in body. She didn’t enjoy the things she once enjoyed. She didn’t eat much food. She drank so much water you’d think she was addicted to it (and yet, paradoxically, was so dehydrated we had to give her fluids through a bag-and-needle). Couldn’t get up the steps easily, as her muscle tone was wasting away. It’s true that we still saw the spark of the old dog in there a few times a day — the way her ears perked up, the way she went sniffing for food while I was cooking, the faint crankypants growl in the back of her throat at invaders real or imagined.
I’m thankful for the days of improvement we did get. She showed more of that spark. She got to play with my sister’s dog a little. Got to eat more food. Get more love. I’m glad we had her around for a few more days. A few more genuinely good days.
Still.
Those days are gone. As they are for all of us, eventually. (And here, not an urging toward the edge of the pit of grief but rather toward the realization that we all head toward the doggy dirtnap one day, and so we should make the best of the time we — and our loved ones — are given.)
Tai, I think, was letting us know.
It was time.
So, we had a new appointment.
The vet came today.
And we had to say goodbye to our little taco terrier here at home.
(Our son said goodbye to our dog, and then went off to stay with his Mom-Mom while the vet came. It was very hard to explain to a three-year-old what was happening, and for a half-hour he was basically shutting down, not acknowledging that she wasn’t going to be here anymore, and was not acting as nice as we’d like — though at that point I found it really important to realize that as much as we dream of his perfect reaction to this whole thing, I’M barely keeping shit together so it’s not very princely of me to expect the toddler to be strong and compassionate.
But just before he left, we told him outright what was happening — no mincing words. I said, “Do you know how my Daddy is dead?” and he said he did. And I said that’s what’s happening to Tai. And then he asked us to turn around so he could say goodbye to her, and he told her he loved her. Honesty, at least with our kid, seems best — even when it’s hard to hear.)
We took her outside to the front lawn. On her bed. The day was bright. The air was warm. The sun poked through the clouds and the sky was blue. Leaves of many colors fell around us. Tai stretched out and relaxed in a way we hadn’t seen her relax in a very long time. We petted her and talked to her. Told her we loved her. She went to sleep. And then she went beyond it.
Goodbye to our little Tai.
I’m sorry we couldn’t do more for you.
We miss you.
Amanda Niehaus-Hard says:
You did what you could. So sorry for your loss.
October 21, 2014 — 1:44 PM
ina says:
I’m sorry. It just sucks losing someone you love. She sounds like she got lots of love and all the other things a doggy could want.I know that doesn’t make it any easier, but I’m glad she had you guys and she lived and died knowing that love.
October 21, 2014 — 1:46 PM
Carol McKenzie says:
I’m so sorry for your loss.
October 21, 2014 — 1:47 PM
Ivan Mulkeen (@IvanMakesGames) says:
I went through something very similar last week with my 24 year old cat, Thalia. She’d been showing her age with each advancing year, but suddenly on Wednesday her entire demeanor, even her sound, changed.
It’s just one of those things you know, right? She basically let us know it was her time and we were lucky enough to spend her last moments with her. Friday, at 7am, she passed holding my hand.
Good lord Chuck, I can’t even imagine how you posted this entire page–I’m a giant ball of quivering mess from two fucking lines… (though, obviously, reading *your* page compounded that.)
Fuck cancer.
Cherish your memories <3
October 21, 2014 — 1:48 PM
Harvey Stanbrough says:
Very sorry for your loss. Damnit.
October 21, 2014 — 1:48 PM
colleenlindsay says:
What a loving tribute to your tiny friend.
October 21, 2014 — 1:49 PM
Lynn Johnston says:
I’m so sorry to hear about the loss of Tai, and wish you and your family well as you grieve. I recently lost the most awesome cat in the world, and it will be a long time before I can think about him without tearing up. *HUG*
October 21, 2014 — 1:49 PM
Maia says:
It sounds like you gave her a beautiful life and a gentle death. This poem by Mary Oliver I think says something about what dogs mean to us. I hope you don’t mind if I paste it here for you.
Her Grave
by Mary Oliver
She would come back, dripping thick water, from the green bog.
She would fall at my feet, she would draw the black skin
from her gums, in a hideous and wonderful smile—–
and I would rub my hands over her pricked ears and her
cunning elbows,
and I would hug the barrel of her body, amazed at the unassuming
perfect arch of her neck.
It took four of us to carry her into the woods.
We did not think of music,
but, anyway, it began to rain
slowly.
Her wolfish, invitational, half-pounce.
Her great and lordly satisfaction at having chased something.
My great and lordly satisfaction at her splash
of happiness as she barged
through the pitch pines swiping my face with her
wild, slightly mossy tongue.
Does the hummingbird think he himself invented his crimson throat?
He is wiser than that, I think.
A dog lives fifteen years, if you’re lucky.
Do the cranes crying out in the high clouds
think it is all their own music?
A dog comes to you and lives with you in your own house, but you
do not therefore own her, as you do not own the rain, or the
trees, or the laws which pertain to them.
Does the bear wandering in the autumn up the side of the hill
think all by herself she has imagined the refuge and the refreshment
of her long slumber?
A dog can never tell you what she knows from the
smells of the world, but you know, watching her, that you know
almost nothing.
Does the water snake with his backbone of diamonds think
the black tunnel on the bank of the pond is a palace
of his own making?
She roved ahead of me through the fields, yet would come back, or
wait for me, or be somewhere.
Now she is buried under the pines.
Nor will I argue it, or pray for anything but modesty, and
not to be angry.
Through the trees is the sound of the wind, palavering
The smell of the pine needles, what is it but a taste
of the infallible energies?
How strong was her dark body!
How apt is her grave place.
How beautiful is her unshakable sleep.
Finally,
the slick mountains of love break
over us.
October 21, 2014 — 1:49 PM
DeAnna says:
Holy shit that kicked me in the gut. I’m so sorry for your loss. *hugs* Losing a pet is one of the worst things out there. I’m sure Tai is in doggy heaven now running around and having a blast. Glad her final moments were with her family and full of love. *more hugs*
October 21, 2014 — 1:50 PM
Raven Blackburn says:
I’m so sorry for your loss. Pets are never just pets and when they go, they take a piece of you with them. I had to put my beloved furbaby to sleep this year, too, and even if it has been months I am still bawling my eyes out every night.
Rest in peace, little one. One day you and your humans will meet again at the rainbow bridge.
October 21, 2014 — 1:50 PM
Lizzy says:
I’m so sorry for your loss… I’ve lost pets too, and naturally it never gets any easier. 🙁 You guys and Tai were lucky to end up with each other – I’m sure she knew you were trying your hardest to help her. I’d like to think pets can feel things like that, anyway.
Hang in there. *virtual hug*
October 21, 2014 — 1:50 PM
lpishere says:
Aww hell. So sorry to hear of your loss.
October 21, 2014 — 1:51 PM
Jenn Lyons says:
Well damn. I’m crying at work.
I’m so sorry for your loss. She was clearly an adorable little taco moppet, and it sounds like your world was better for having her love. I’m certain her world was better for having yours.
October 21, 2014 — 1:51 PM
alexristea says:
I have never been brought to tears so profoundly. Condolences, Chuck.
October 21, 2014 — 1:51 PM
Steve Fahnestalk says:
So sorry for your loss, Chuck. It’s always hard saying goodbye to a loved one; I know in my heart that all family animals know when they’re loved. And when one is saying farewell to them.
October 21, 2014 — 1:51 PM
wildcatbrass79 says:
So sorry for your loss, Chuck. Thank you for be willing to share this with us though. As someone who lost two pets a couple years ago in the same manner, it was strangely therapeutic (and viscerally difficult) to read this.
October 21, 2014 — 1:52 PM
Jim Hague says:
Ah, jeez, Chuck. Having said goodbye to two of our friends in the past year, I feel you. Hugs and vibes, man.
October 21, 2014 — 1:52 PM
Kevin Wallace says:
I’m sorry to hear that, Chuck :(. If only one person spoke of me in such a way when it came time for my doggy dirt-nap, though, I think I could consider my life a total success. She sounds like she was a vivid character, to be sure.
Happy dreams, Tai.
October 21, 2014 — 1:52 PM
Lisa Nicholas says:
It always cuts so deep when we have to say goodbye, but as a former animal rescuer, I wish more dogs had people like you. She looks like a very happy dog in the photos.
October 21, 2014 — 1:54 PM
kat says:
Sorry, Chuck. Sympathy and empathy.
October 21, 2014 — 1:55 PM
Catastrophe Jones says:
No matter how long they’re with us for, it’s never long enough. She knows you love her, and you must know she loves you. That’s what we get to keep, always. Take care, Wendig. You’re in the thoughts and hearts of all your word-nerds.
October 21, 2014 — 1:55 PM
Justine says:
So sorry for your loss, but so glad you got to share your life with a precious, precocious taco-pup. Pets are the balm for our soul. It’s a shame they can’t live as long as we do.
October 21, 2014 — 1:55 PM
sarahappifanie says:
That was beautiful and heartbreaking. I’m sorry for your loss–she was adorable, and she clearly lived a great life with your family. <3
Taco terrier is the superior name indeed.
October 21, 2014 — 1:56 PM
The Life and Times of Poopwa Foley says:
I didn’t know your dog but now I miss her too. I’ve been in your shoes; our lab Sam died of lymphoma a couple of years ago and I still miss him. Sorry for your loss.
October 21, 2014 — 1:56 PM
chocolatenotprunes says:
I’m so sorry for your loss. Losing a family member is always hard. It sounds like Tai was very loved.
October 21, 2014 — 1:56 PM
N. M. Scuri says:
I sit and weep with you. Please accept my condolences, Chuck.
October 21, 2014 — 1:57 PM
pmsteffen says:
Such a beautiful tribute to little Tai. I am crying. My thoughts are with you. <3
October 21, 2014 — 1:57 PM
Jaime says:
This made me cry. What a gorgeous, sweet dog. I stopped after the photo of her little paws sticking out to compose myself so I could keep going. Rest in peace, little taco.
October 21, 2014 — 1:57 PM
Jamie Chavez says:
I have had to do this more than once. It’s excruciating. I’m so sorry. Crying with you.
October 21, 2014 — 1:58 PM
Maddison says:
You will see her at the rainbow bridge .. Where my beloveds wait for me. I shed tears for you all.
October 21, 2014 — 1:59 PM
Paul Weimer says:
I’m so sorry for your loss Chuck. My condolences.
October 21, 2014 — 1:59 PM
Dawn Pier says:
I have been there more times than I care to remember and am now looking at the prospect of saying good bye to another friend who shares many of Tai’s problems. She is losing weight, has an autoimmune disease that makes her skin attack itself and allows mites to take it over…she is sweet and loves butt scratches and has experienced more fear and pain in her little life than any being should (long story, but she was abused and then abandoned and has never forgot it). I’m bending over backwards to make her last days (months maybe?) the best including not taking a trip to South Africa that included free accommodations etc etc…so I can look after her. You were a great and loving dad to Tai…know that above all else. And her suffering is over…thank you for being compassionate enough to let her go when it was time.
October 21, 2014 — 2:00 PM
Ruth Dupré says:
I’m crying. You did the best you could. I’m so sorry for your loss.
October 21, 2014 — 2:00 PM
Dawn Pier says:
Oh and “doggy dirtnap” is painfully priceless…
October 21, 2014 — 2:01 PM
johnnadub says:
So beautifully written. Thank you for sharing Tai, and your experiences with her. Especially the difficult parts.
October 21, 2014 — 2:02 PM
Donna Lewis says:
Hugs to you and your family. You are in my thoughts. Your dog was very loved that comes through in every line of your post. My tears, from hearing that love, remembering how I felt when my beloved pets died, join yours.
October 21, 2014 — 2:02 PM
Ransome says:
I’m crying in the car line at school to pick up my boy. So much love so much sadness. Cyber hug and tears for you-
October 21, 2014 — 2:02 PM
Allan Christa says:
My heart is with you and your family. My husband is a veterinarian and, even though he/we know the decision is made in love to prevent pain and suffering, it’s no less difficult, no less heartbreaking. Even for our staff, it’s a sadness that eclipses words.
My daughter’s 17-year-old toy Pom died Friday. We are imagining sweet Kirby in doggie heaven eating all the pancakes and waffles his stomach can hold. Perhaps he and Tai are basking in the sun, eating all sorts of untold crap, and devising their coup to take over doggie universe.
October 21, 2014 — 2:04 PM
Melissa Lewicki says:
This was a beautiful essay. Thank you for sharing. We had to have my dad’s 20 year old cat put down last spring. My dad is still not over it. I keep thinking I see her around the corner. It is so amazing how our animals make such a hole in our hearts when they leave us. My sympathies on your loss.
October 21, 2014 — 2:05 PM
Writer of Wrongs says:
I can only say I’m so sorry for your loss. There really aren’t any words that offer solace when we lose a friend like this. Thank you for sharing this moment.
October 21, 2014 — 2:05 PM
Leslie Nuccio says:
It fucking sucks when you have to let them go, but there is grace in those moments, too. Tai knew and she gave you those few extra days. Am I nuts for believing that? Perhaps, but I don’t care. Being in animal rescue, I’ve had to say goodbye to too many dogs. Some I’ve had for years, others just a few days but each one shredded me when I felt them sag into oblivion. Even knowing how much it will hurt, I still spread a blanket on the cold vet office floor and lay down with my dog so they’re wrapped in my arms, warm, safe, loved. That is my gift to them, and, being a selfish wench, to me.
Thank you for having the strength to be there for Tai. Too many sick old dogs get dumped into shelters, left to die in the arms of a stranger. I really hope karma exists. That way I know the miserable humans who were so cold they would abandon a faithful friend, get karma drop-kicked from that day until their frozen hearts shatter.
RIP Tai.
October 21, 2014 — 2:05 PM
Amy K. Nichols says:
What a beautiful tribute. You and your family are in my thoughts.
October 21, 2014 — 2:06 PM
Cynthia says:
Heartbreaking! I’m so sorry for your loss! We have a spunky little chihuahua right now and I dread that day. He is my little light and I will appreciate him even more today. Blessings and light to you and your family and your little Tai.
October 21, 2014 — 2:06 PM
Misa says:
Not ashamed to admit I cried over this.
October 21, 2014 — 2:07 PM
Lauralynn Elliott says:
I’m sitting here at my desk at work with tears streaming down my face. I feel your pain since I’ve been through this before. My heart hurts for you and your family.
October 21, 2014 — 2:08 PM
MIchele Bardsley says:
*sob* Much love to you and yours. What a beautiful fur baby.
October 21, 2014 — 2:09 PM
Susan says:
That sucks. Hope she’s in Puppy Taco Heaven.
October 21, 2014 — 2:10 PM
Sarah_Madison says:
It is both the hardest and bravest decision we make on behalf of our pets.Part of my job entails helping people come to terms with when it is time to take this action, and it never gets any easier. Tai was loved long and loved hard, and not many of us can say that. You and your family are in my thoughts.
October 21, 2014 — 2:10 PM
Fiona Cameron says:
So sad. As Sarah Madison says, it’s never easy to know when the time has come.
October 21, 2014 — 2:13 PM
Laura L. says:
I’m sorry. Pets bring us such joy but their relatively short life-spans bring us such pain. I’m glad you have such good memories, beautiful pictures and words to share. You gave her an incredible eulogy, celebrating her. *hug*
October 21, 2014 — 2:14 PM