Thursday, July 19, 2007

Old Mr. Puffy Pants. Part Four.


Read Part One here.
Read Part Two here.
Read Part Three here.

i am telling this story way too fast. i am skimming over the surface. i know that.

it seems wrong to inflict on you the excruciating day by day troubles of having a beloved dog grow old and sick. i am too aware that this is depressing, and so i am not jumping in with both feet. and yet i have to tell it. it is not depressing to me, exactly. it is sad, but not depressing. i loved that dog, even when he frightened us by getting up one evening, toddling across the living room floor, and then suddenly squatting right in front of doug and letting loose on the carpet with a long stream of pee.

he did this in a deliberate way, as though he thought he were somewhere else--outside, in the yard, along a wooded trail. it was as though he had completely forgotten that he was in the house.

that happened about six months before he died, maybe right around the time of his first collapse. it was just beginning to grow clear to us, then, that something was very wrong.

that night at the university hospital was difficult. doug and i sat in the waiting room for a long time. there was not much to read. we didn't talk much. we were both very worried. i looked out the window at the darkened street; not many cars went by this time of night. i got up to find a bathroom and walked past a room with an open door; i looked in, and there was toby panting on an exam table, and three or four white-coated doctors, including nettie, standing around him. i watched from the doorway as they moved around him, pressing their stethoscopes against his chest, until someone looked up and i moved away.

after awhile, nettie came out and crouched down next to us. toby has a lot of fluid in his chest, she said. it's pressing on his lungs and making it hard for him to breathe.

she said they wanted to keep him for a couple of days. they would put him in an oxygen cage, which would help with his breathing, and they would drain off some of the fluid.

so doug and i trudged back out to the truck in the starry dark of that cold april morning. we were stiff and tired from sitting so long, and from no sleep, and we drove home without our dog.

boscoe met us at the door. we reached down and scratched his ears, and he sniffed us in an inquiring way. and then we all went upstairs and crawled into bed. it was almost dawn.

TO BE CONTINUED

5 comments:

Kaycie said...

I think you're telling it perfectly, Laurie.

The Rotten Correspondent said...

Do you realize how strongly your love for these dogs comes through in your writing? I too have three dogs, and they too are family members. Love your blog.

wakeupandsmellthecoffee said...

Oh, this is reminding me of when my beloved cat, Kittyboy, got old and infirm. At 17, he seemed to forget how to get outside so he would poop in my then-husband's Converse sneakers. Then-husband thought it was deliberate. I thought it was hilarious.

laurie said...

thanks, guys. more installments to come... thanks for sticking with me.

re pooping indoors: a friend of mine is a retired travel writer. her dog got tired of her always leaving, so one time when she had everything out so she could pack for yet another trip, the dog walked over to the open suitcase and took a dump inside.

guess he made his needs apparent.

Swampwitch said...

You story is perfect the way you are writing it. Anyone who has lost a beloved pet understands your sorrow. Just keep on sharing anyway you feel like telling it.
If you haven't read my post about our Junior, the next time you're at my place, go to the left side bar and click on his picture. You'll understand.