
This morning I stayed in bed till late. I was awake, but I didn’t want to get up to a house without Pierre in it.
Yesterday I had to put my dog down. Such a gentle euphemism for murder. To put one to sleep. My dear, dear dog-man trusted me, yet I tricked him. First by lulling him into thinking it was a normal day by asking my husband to roast a chicken at home that delighted his nose and soothed his belly. But afterward a vet arrived. She knotted a tourniquet at his rear thigh, shaved an area below it, and injected a sedative. His fitful gasping evened, his pain-blinded stare softened. Amid caresses and loving murmurs, the vet administered a second shot to finish him off.

But Pierre lingered within his peaceful half-sleep. So another shave. Then a third shot to a different leg. That one finally killed him.
Nicer ways exist to frame this, but my heart won’t listen to the many fine arguments for how, whether, and when.
No, I don’t know of a better way to have done it. When his kidneys began to fail, and arthritis increasingly ravaged his days and nights, I promised us two things; he’d never take another trembling ride to a vet, and he’d never be wet again (he was a Labrador mix one-of-a-kind who hated water).
Fortunately, we could afford to have a vet to visit our home for those final injections. Fortunately, I could be with Pierre, my sweetest, most uncomplicated of friendships and loves. Fortunately, he’d lived a good long life, as dog lives go.

All the same, this was the awfullest decision I hope ever to make.
Life is beautiful, merciless, humbling.

As much as our recent time together — these months of arranging throw rugs, moving furniture, closing doors so he wouldn’t get tangled among legs or be locked into rooms or slip and not be able to get back up, all which upset him to no end — these months of his hobbled struggle to follow me everywhere and to share walks with his sisters even though he’d fall within a few steps from home — this stoic period when, despite his waning appetite, he’d eat all that my family hand fed him while I experimented with healing remedies and weight gaining foods — this era when we set ramps and nudged him up and I learned the trick to gathering his 55 pounds into my arms to navigate down — these weeks of carrying him outside to pee in the middle of the night because the shame of soiling his diapers showed naked in his eyes (debilitated kidneys need volumes more water to compensate)…

and even though yesterday was the worst, today not a whole lot better…
I am thankful for every moment we shared. Hopefully, he knew he was loved…
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I am so sorry for your loss
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thank you, Gloria
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Very sorry for your loss. (Couldn’t get myself to push the “like” button)
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thank you – indeed, ‘like’ doesn’t always apply, does it?…
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Nope. Try to have a nice week-end nonetheless.
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My dear I’m sure he knows.
Warm hugs from Italy
Vicky
❤
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much appreciated, cara Vicky ❤
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My heart breaks for you. I have known no greater pain than losing my two sweet animals only days apart. It’s been over 20 years and I still cry for them. Lucky Pierre, indeed, to have had the life he did with you as his mom.
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thank you, dear – my heart breaks for you as well. still, it is better to have had them in our lives than not, don’t you agree? sigh
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I miss my small yellow lab so so much. Been 32 years, never had another dog since. Tried to follow but rejected my email dagostino07@gmail.com. Will try notify box below.
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thanks for condolences & mine back to you
as for following — wordpress reblog buttons, etc, go down sometimes — perhaps try again at a later date?
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