A blog about my adventures as a grief warrior

Tag: #petloss

A Resource for Grieving Pet Owners

A neighbor told me of his friend whose small dog got loose and darted into traffic.  He was hit by a car and his friend witnessed all of it.  Standing helplessly on the side of the road, she waited for the traffic to stop so she could run out and pick up his limp little body.  “She hasn’t been the same since”, he said.

When this happened, Tango was still alive. I bumped into her months later and asked how she was managing.  She gave credit to the book, “The Grief Recovery Handbook for Pet Loss” by Russell Friedman, Cole James, and John W. James.  She gave it to me and said, “for when the time comes.”

I read it recently, interested to see if the authors offered grieving pet owners anything different than how we grieve for our humans. The answer is mainly no.  This book was filled with ideas and stories related to what happens to you when grief arrives.  It suggests things like writing your pet a letter to honor them, keeping some of their ashes in a piece of memorial jewelry and being sensitive to outbursts of sorrow. The advice is universal, how to handle the loss of a loved one.  Whether they have two legs or four.  I think the only suggestion that seemed different from child loss was the suggestion to get another pet. I have told my family, Tango cannot be replaced, so don’t try.

After Tango passed, I saw her a few times around the neighborhood. She would have noticed that Tango was not with me each time. The last time I saw her, she smiled and said gently, “I see you lost your best friend.” I nodded and we spent a moment sharing how hard it is, how we will not get over it.  She asked if I read the book, she had given me. I said I had, and we compared notes.  She said, “we don’t forget because the pain helps us to remember. But I hope that time aids in softening the heartache.”

Tango passed away three months ago. I have yet to put away his food bowl. I sleep with his stuffed bear who now wears Tango’s collar. I can’t come into our complex without imagining him there at the front, sniffing the flowers or wagging his tail at someone crossing the street. I have yet to stop crying.  Never has a pet affected me like this before.  But then, there was never a pet quite like our man-dog, Tango. Even my husband says he can still feel Tango’s paw on his foot as he cooks his lunch.  A habit that was Tango’s way of begging.  He would place his paw on top of your foot so you would notice him.  Our dog has left a HUGE hole in our daily routine.  And an even bigger hole in my heart.

I practice the basics of grief to handle the loss of my sweet dog. I am trying to find ways to honor him. The first opportunity was answering a plea on twitter from a new animal shelter I support.  They said that they were looking for dog food for their ‘pets-giving’ dinner.  I thought it perfect that Tango would share dinner with his fellow canines. 

I promised the woman who gave me the book, I would pass it on to the next person I know who experiences the loss of their pet. The book is helpful for those who are fresh on the path of grief and filled with gentle reminders for those of us who are already living with grief.

Sending Tango to His Next Adventure

My daughter said it best.  He was the love of my life. Understandably, husband was working, kids had their own activities, I was the one left to walk, feed and care for our little beast. For 17 years he was my companion, my confidante, my unconditional love. He got me out walking each day, every day. He helped me consume my dinner plate; it is customary to cook 2 pieces of fish as he will surely eat one. He slept next to me, listened to me and yes, he talked back. He made me laugh and when I cried, he was there to dry the tears with his tiny pink tongue. I had great joy living with this dog.  I would never be prepared to say goodbye.

Then, ready, or not, for either of us, the day came. And my focus changed from not having him leave to how will he leave.  I would not have him in a sterile office that caused him anxiety and was filled with no familiar smells.  No, it had to be at home.  Surrounded by family and the love we have for him. Finding a vet available to do this at the last minute proved difficult until the phone rang, and a soft Spanish accent identified herself as Dr. Paty.  She suggested she could help.  “I’ll give him a little cocktail,” she said. I loved that term, rather than the word sedation. She continued, “then, we surround him with love and together, we send him to heaven for his next adventure”.  I loved how she described euthanasia. It was more about departing this realm.  She spoke my language.  She got me.  “How soon can you be here?” I asked.  “I will be there in thirty minutes.”

Our daughter and her fiancé arrived, and the family sat with Tango as he received his cocktail. Dr. Paty suggested giving him a treat while she did this to distract him.  I brought out a dog treat and she said to me, “Mama, that is the treat you want to give him today?”  I giggled.  He got a stick of cheese to eat, accompanied by a stick of pepperoni.  We moved him to a fluffy bed the good doctor had made and laid him down. He cuddled into my leg and rested his head on it. He looked up into my eyes and I leaned over and whispered, “it’s ok. You’re going to go see Zane. You’re going to a place where you can run without your leash on and eat all the cheese puffs you want!” I rubbed his head softly. He was not afraid. He cuddled into me and rested.

When we all had said our goodbye’s, Dr. Paty gave him his final needle and started to listen to his heartbeat. I felt a murmur in my ear and turned to see whose hand was on my shoulder. There was no one there, and then my heart knew. Zane had arrived to take his beloved dog home.  I nodded. Dr. Paty said, “he is gone now”. Our sweet man-dog, our precious little canine. His head still on my leg.  His warm body still pressed against me.

Dr. Paty said, “I’ll now wrap him up like a burrito”.  We chuckled at how fitting it was for him to be wrapped up like a favorite food.  She placed the little burrito in my arms.  It was like holding a baby, coddled in a warm sleeping bag.  I squeezed him and brought him to the car to be transported to the funeral home.

The result of losing someone you love is the same, whether it is a human or a pet.  A loved one is a loved one and grief is grief. As with any other massive loss, my heart broke, the tears have not stopped. Everything reminds me of him. I can hear his little toenails walking across the hardwood floor.  I look at the clock and think it’s time for his walk. I start dinner and look down as if somehow, he will still be there waiting for a piece of food to fall into his mouth. I cannot remove his toys or his leash or his bowls.  I can’t even clean the floor. I don’t want any proof of his existence to be removed.  I am at a loss. A total and complete loss.  My purpose seems bleak, my world seems dark and my heart screams for one more touch of his paw on my foot to say, “here I am mama. I am not gone.”   

I have had years of practice dealing with grief and yet I find myself at ground zero. The pain is sharp and the loneliness of the journey large. I am trying to convince myself that comfort can be found in knowing that we did the right thing.  And we did. I understand this loss is not the same as other losses. I understand that he was not going to get better.  I understand that it was an old dog who had lived a great life. My brain gets all that. But my heart does not. My love for him was deep and thus, as we know, the grief will also be deep. The small, frail ray of hope that I will survive another loss is now the piece that I hold on to with each breath.

I read, if a dog is loved so deeply by its owner, then it will return to earth in human form as its reward for being a good dog. Tango will be back.

Goodbye, Excalibur

This week we lost and buried another family member. Excalibur, my daughter’s leopard gecko died peacefully, surrounded by family. I know it was ‘just a lizard’ but this little guy was with us for 13 years.  As Payton came and went with her busy life, mama was left to tend to him, feed him and enjoy him.  We were told years ago that he would not live long as he refused to eat anything but dead worms.  They are like a chocolate bar the vet told us.  He must eat crickets.  But he would not. And I was ok with that as the whole non-vegetarian diet creeped me out.  I could handle putting a small dead worm on his plate and watch him gobble it up.  Easy. He loved to sit on a cushion beside you; he did not run around or away.   He reminded us very much of the gecko you find on the TV ad. He carried that much personality in his 6-ounce body!

Our pets, regardless of its type, are family members.  They experience life with us, and they become part of our routine. We have memories of shared times with them. We love them. When Excalibur passed, I packed up all his belongings and cried for two days. I would wait to hear him at night and then remember he was gone.  I would go to turn on his light and he was gone. Gone, bringing grief to the forefront.

I have been sensitive all week.  I have been unfocused and not much got done. I am aware now, with the experience of loss, that I am grieving.  And I allowed myself to do so.  I cancelled meetings and took a drive to Canmore and sat in the park.  The grief of losing Excalibur just adds to my already broken heart.

As he was a pet who lived to an old age, I will not ponder on the events and experiences he will miss out on. I will remember how he made me smile and will not burst into a flood of tears over it. I do not feel cheated as I do with the deaths of other family members. That is the complexity of grief.  With every loss, you feel it, but the intensity can be different. Grief can come in soft, more melancholy at times. I guess it depends on the circumstances.

We hosted a small memorial for Excalibur.  Just our family, with Zane watching over.   Payton somehow found a bit of peace knowing that her gecko’s spirit was now free to roam the realms with her big brother. I came home to feel his absence. And ponder how could I honor this sweet little creature that brought so much love to our family over the years.  Rest in Peace, sweet little gecko.  And know that you brought such joy to each of us.  A life well lived; you will always be in our hearts.

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