~*~DEDICATION ~*~
I am dedicating this blog entry to our beloved vet. Dr. Bradler, and her wonderful husband Mark, who have cared for our animal companions for nearly 20 years and who have shown such grace, strength, and love all of these years, and who, in the end, made the experience of Babs passing out of this life and into the next a beautiful, peaceful, and deeply spiritual experience, even through all the tears. I treasure them, as we all do. I have never known an experience with a vet like we have with Dr. Bradler and her husband Mark who assists her and is always with her as they come to our home to visit and care for my sweet little ones, and I thank them both from the bottom of my heart.
To Dr. B, and Mark, with love always, and more admiration and gratitude than I could ever express. Many thanks and much love to you both...
My wee tiny girl - And I had
to lighten the picture so you
can see her. She looked like a
tiny black blob in the picture
otherwise!
I have had dogs all of my life and a great variety of breeds and interesting mixes since my canine companions have come almost entirely from the Humane Society or a breed rescue as in the case of our big sweetheart Weesa, a Newfoundland who came from Newf Rescue many years ago. I didn't know much of anything about pugs except that they were those curious little beings whom people who were owned by them would tell all and sundry that they were not really dogs but little alien beings, or something unusual and certainly at a far more highly elevated level than the normal canine species, but anything, anything, but a real dog. They were certainly a more highly evolved species and should be treated as such. I found this curious and amusing. Those funny people, I thought. I'd never seen any breed specific dog owners who acted quite the way that pug people seemed to act. They were, I thought, kind of odd people who dressed these little creatures up in all manner of embarrassing outfits and even more surprising to me was that these tiny little creatures didn't seem to mind. As long as a treat is involved and a soft bed to nap in, most of the day, you can do almost anything to a pug.
They tickled me but I never thought about having one. Then came the day that I met a man who is one of my dearest friends of many years now, and he had had two pugs. He was completely smitten and told me funny stories about these curious little souls who clearly were not dogs. Not at all. I was fascinated.
Years went by and one day I found myself thinking, as I had for some time, that I wanted to learn more about pugs and I came upon Mid-Atlantic Pug Rescue who actually covered my geographic area. I thought, "I'll just take a little peek." Ha! 4 pugs later I can tell you that you can't just take a "peek" at a pug. As soon as you see one you have to have one. At least that's what happened to me.
I thought I would look them over, think about it, research them for awhile and perhaps get one "someday" but the very moment that I clicked on the page with the rescue's pugs for adoption a funny little black face peered up at me. It was an elderly little lady named Babs. I think it might have been about 3 seconds before I was writing an e-mail to the rescue. I had to have her. I was completely smitten. And I couldn't take my eyes off of her. It was love at first sight.
Then came the requisite background check and while her foster parents were driving a few hours to bring her it was understood that a house visit was in order before they would actually leave her with me. I was a nervous wreck. Would the house be clean enough? Would I be okay? Would they approve of me? Would Babs? They walked into the house carrying a tiny little black creature who looked like nothing I had ever seen. A picture doesn't prepare you for the fact that they will charm the socks off of you the minute they first enter your presence, and turn your world on it's ear. Once they told me that it looked like everything was in order and she could stay with me I heaved a great sigh of relief, took her in my arms and kissed the living daylights out of her. As the woman from the rescue was leaving she looked over her shoulder, laughed, and said, "Be prepared, pugs are like potato chips, you can't have just one." I didn't know that she meant that literally. The next month Sampson came to stay and 2 months later a chubby funny little girl named Coco waddled in the door and into my heart. Harvey came 9 months later and they would probably have kept coming but the rescue cut me off! I had become, like many before me, a "Pug Addict." And I can tell you right now I will have them all the days of my life.
I have opened my heart and home to pugs and have dedicated myself to doing whatever I can to help the rescue along the way. As a fiber artist 20% of all of the proceeds of my fiber art will go to this wonderful rescue, and the rest into a fund to care for my wee little soulmates. I take the elderly or disabled because they have won my heart, the love trumps all the difficulties that may come with them and they have brightened my world beyond measure.
I live in a house full of senior citizens, and the only downside is that you fall madly in love and the end comes too soon. I had three years with my tiny precious Babs, and she passed away and over The Rainbow Bridge a week and a half ago. Our dear vet came to our house with her wonderful husband and I held my little girl, kissing her, stroking her, and telling her how much I loved her as she completely relaxed in my arms and then passed on through the portal to a land I cannot see or know. The loss cut so deep that I have actually tried to write an entry about her seven times before finally writing this one. I have been too grief stricken to get past the first few words without crying, but in the end writing a tribute to my tiny black girl was more important than my own broken heart. And I owed so very much to this little girl, both in her life, and death, she taught me a great many things that I would never have learned otherwise.
to lighten the picture so you
can see her. She looked like a
tiny black blob in the picture
otherwise!
I have had dogs all of my life and a great variety of breeds and interesting mixes since my canine companions have come almost entirely from the Humane Society or a breed rescue as in the case of our big sweetheart Weesa, a Newfoundland who came from Newf Rescue many years ago. I didn't know much of anything about pugs except that they were those curious little beings whom people who were owned by them would tell all and sundry that they were not really dogs but little alien beings, or something unusual and certainly at a far more highly elevated level than the normal canine species, but anything, anything, but a real dog. They were certainly a more highly evolved species and should be treated as such. I found this curious and amusing. Those funny people, I thought. I'd never seen any breed specific dog owners who acted quite the way that pug people seemed to act. They were, I thought, kind of odd people who dressed these little creatures up in all manner of embarrassing outfits and even more surprising to me was that these tiny little creatures didn't seem to mind. As long as a treat is involved and a soft bed to nap in, most of the day, you can do almost anything to a pug.
They tickled me but I never thought about having one. Then came the day that I met a man who is one of my dearest friends of many years now, and he had had two pugs. He was completely smitten and told me funny stories about these curious little souls who clearly were not dogs. Not at all. I was fascinated.
Years went by and one day I found myself thinking, as I had for some time, that I wanted to learn more about pugs and I came upon Mid-Atlantic Pug Rescue who actually covered my geographic area. I thought, "I'll just take a little peek." Ha! 4 pugs later I can tell you that you can't just take a "peek" at a pug. As soon as you see one you have to have one. At least that's what happened to me.
I thought I would look them over, think about it, research them for awhile and perhaps get one "someday" but the very moment that I clicked on the page with the rescue's pugs for adoption a funny little black face peered up at me. It was an elderly little lady named Babs. I think it might have been about 3 seconds before I was writing an e-mail to the rescue. I had to have her. I was completely smitten. And I couldn't take my eyes off of her. It was love at first sight.
Then came the requisite background check and while her foster parents were driving a few hours to bring her it was understood that a house visit was in order before they would actually leave her with me. I was a nervous wreck. Would the house be clean enough? Would I be okay? Would they approve of me? Would Babs? They walked into the house carrying a tiny little black creature who looked like nothing I had ever seen. A picture doesn't prepare you for the fact that they will charm the socks off of you the minute they first enter your presence, and turn your world on it's ear. Once they told me that it looked like everything was in order and she could stay with me I heaved a great sigh of relief, took her in my arms and kissed the living daylights out of her. As the woman from the rescue was leaving she looked over her shoulder, laughed, and said, "Be prepared, pugs are like potato chips, you can't have just one." I didn't know that she meant that literally. The next month Sampson came to stay and 2 months later a chubby funny little girl named Coco waddled in the door and into my heart. Harvey came 9 months later and they would probably have kept coming but the rescue cut me off! I had become, like many before me, a "Pug Addict." And I can tell you right now I will have them all the days of my life.
I have opened my heart and home to pugs and have dedicated myself to doing whatever I can to help the rescue along the way. As a fiber artist 20% of all of the proceeds of my fiber art will go to this wonderful rescue, and the rest into a fund to care for my wee little soulmates. I take the elderly or disabled because they have won my heart, the love trumps all the difficulties that may come with them and they have brightened my world beyond measure.
I live in a house full of senior citizens, and the only downside is that you fall madly in love and the end comes too soon. I had three years with my tiny precious Babs, and she passed away and over The Rainbow Bridge a week and a half ago. Our dear vet came to our house with her wonderful husband and I held my little girl, kissing her, stroking her, and telling her how much I loved her as she completely relaxed in my arms and then passed on through the portal to a land I cannot see or know. The loss cut so deep that I have actually tried to write an entry about her seven times before finally writing this one. I have been too grief stricken to get past the first few words without crying, but in the end writing a tribute to my tiny black girl was more important than my own broken heart. And I owed so very much to this little girl, both in her life, and death, she taught me a great many things that I would never have learned otherwise.
What did Babs teach me?
The day Babs arrived, Aug. 15, '07
Babs taught me that you can be a very small person on the outside but have a huge heart and make a very BIG impact on someones life. She taught me about love in a way that no one and nothing ever has. I have often said, known, believed that dogs are the only unconditional love that we will ever know in this lifetime. Babs helped me understand this on a far deeper level. I adore my parrots but their love is conditional and they will bite the hoo-ha out of you if you make them mad. While I am allergic to cats I think they are beautiful, amazing creatures and one of the most fascinating companions you can have. And yes, they can be quite affectionate. On their own terms. IF they feel like it. Cats are independent, know that they are far superior to their humans, and can look with disdain at anything in their surroundings that they consider lesser than themselves. You know, something like a dog. Cats can love you dearly, but they will let you know when they don't approve of something and they may have to ignore you for awhile before you straighten yourself out and admit that they are right. They always have the upper hand. I only wish I had a little bit of what they have. They are so sure of themselves.
Babs showed me that adversity is nothing to complain or moan and bellyache about. She was hard of hearing when I got her and over the first year and a half I had her she went completely deaf and then blind, but did that stop her? The home that we had when she came into my life was very small. She liked to have her bed down in a little nook at the end of the hall, with Coco's bed right next to her, only a few feet from the kitchen. Completely blind she knew exactly how to leave her little nook, walk a little way down the hall and turn into the kitchen and go right to her food and water bowls. She knew when it was treat time and without being able to see or hear it coming she would stand up and waggle her whole little self. When I was heading in her direction, still too far to hear footsteps, and she couldn't see anyway, she would stand up and wag her tail and lift her head in my direction, white blind eyes that could see in a way past "seeing," a much deeper way, a way that transcends physical body and lives on a highly sensory plain that allows amazing gifts to unfold. Babs did not complain as her body began to change and become more limited, she simply adapted and did the best she could without complaint. This lesson has sunk in deeply, especially since she has left my hearth, home and this earth entirely. She leaves behind volumes of lessons and information it will take me awhile to understand and digest, but some memory surfaces every day of this brave tiny soul who ambled about as best she could, never held back for a moment because of her "disabilities."
Babsie taught me that love continues to grow as the body goes, and she became ever dearer every day that I had her. And she helped me grow towards what I would need to do for her when the time came. I don't know that it is fair to say most people, but I think it's fair to say that a great many people don't want to adopt seniors. They worry about the medical bills which certainly are a consideration. But most of all they worry about what all of us who have seniors do, that we will come to love them so dearly, that their loss will cut so deeply it will be hard to survive their loss. And that is certainly the case. But greater, for me, has been the knowledge that I can take these seniors into my home, love them with my whole heart and being, and know that I have given the best, most loving home in their last years that I possibly can, that they will be well fed and get the vet care they need and deserve, and, yes, when the time is right, to be prepared to let go, a thing harder to do than I ever imagined. I knew it would come for them all one day, in their own time, but Babsie was the oldest, and at 15 1/2, blind, deaf, and becoming increasing unwell, with the best effort of my vet and myself, with all the love I could give her there came the day that it was time. My heart was breaking. I cried all day long, but when it was time I pulled myself together as best I could because in those final moments it wasn't about what was hard for me, it was about what was best and most loving for her. And so the end came. It was time.
Babs was not a morning person. She looked
grumpy a great deal of the time, but it was
all show. She would melt into me and soak
up all the love she could get when I scooped
her up into my arms and hugged and kissed
canoodled her puggery self...
The Final Days...
When Babs came to me she had suffered a collapsed trachea, not unusual in pugs, and I had to give her Albuterol twice a day to help her breathe. It worked pretty well until the last couple of months of her life. As she began to have a more difficult time breathing Dr. Bradler put her on medication to help the COPD that was making it harder and harder for her to breathe and to try to help her release the build up of fluid in her lungs. For the first week or so she seemed markedly better, but by the end of the second week she was going back downhill again. Not as bad as before, but not good. I continued to give her her Albuterol and we were going to give her a week or two to see how she did before following another course of treatment. Before that time came, her time came, and it was shockingly evident in those final days how fast she went downhill. I was terrified that I wouldn't know the "right time" to make the decision but Dr. Bradler told me that I would know when the time was right.
I carried her about in my arms loving her and crying. One day when the rest of us got up -- the dogs usually want to go out somewhere just before or after 6 and she would always be up and moving about waiting to be picked up and taken out and if I didn't get there fast enough she would be yowling to beat the band until I got her -- I let the other dogs out into our big fenced back yard but Babs wasn't awake. I knew that if I didn't get her out she'd likely have to go as soon as I went back to lay down again for an hour or so so I gently picked her up and carried her out. She peed and I brought her in and she went immediately back to sleep. Normally when we get up the 2nd time around 7:30 or 8 she would need to go out again too, but for the last few days of her life she would never wake up this second time, in fact it was more like 1:00 in the afternoon when she started moving about a little and I would scoop her up and carry her out. Until the end she never went to the potty in the house, and amazingly, she ate and drank well up until right before she died. In fact she was eating a little when Dr. B and Mark came to see her for the last time, but she was panting heavily and her tongue was swollen and blue. She was not getting enough oxygen and she was starting to stumble.
The day before she passed I was beside myself because she slept all day long, I could not rouse her, and I thought, "This is it." I really thought I would go in and find out that she had crossed over, but this wouldn't be the case. At 11:00 that night I left a message on Dr. Bradler's machine saying that I thought her time had come, that she had slept all day, barely moved, and I was frightened and heart-broken. Amazingly, after I called the vet, and after she had not moved all day she got up and started walking around. I picked her up and carried her outside. I had a 6' leash for her and we were like a carousel with me at the middle and Babs circling the circumference. She seemed quite secure in that she would go in a definite circle, always with just enough tension on the leash that she felt safe. When she had done what she needed to do she would stop dead in her tracks and just stand there until I picked her up. She waggled her little self when I did, and I kissed and cuddled her and told her that she was my beautiful Princess all the way in. Even in the last few months of her life, until those last weeks, I would laugh when I took her out because she would go hippity hopping around her circle like a little bunny rabbit. That last night she moved slowly, went to the bathroom, stumbling a little, and when I carried her in she actually ate a little and drank some water, but then went back to the incessant heavy panting that upset and worried me so badly that I realized when she finally did calm down and go to sleep that my body was rigid as a board and I don't think I had barely breathed at all. I knew the time was near but I still couldn't get my mind around it.
The next day was awful. She was up to go out both times early and paced and paced and paced breathing heavily ongoing. I couldn't hold back the tears as she paced and staggered and struggled to breathe. I called Dr. Bradler and said, "This is it." The time was arranged. It was 2:00 in the afternoon when the decision was made and Dr. B. and Mark would be there at 7:30 that night. I called my daughter Rachel who had been here to help tenderly
I will never forget, for the rest of my days, how incredibly loving and gentle Dr. Bradler was. She sat on a chair very near and asked me if I was ready. I said, with a heavy heart, that I was. She took a little time then to go over with us everything that might possibly happen as she was passing away as her body relaxed and when through the stages of crossing over. A heavy towel was placed on my lap in case she let go of her bowels as her body let go. It was time.
Dear Dr. Bradler came close, and Mark beside us, and she explained how the first shot would allow her to drift off into a pleasant sleep like one does when an anesthesiologist gives the anesthetic before surgery. This would soften and gentle her way through the transition. The thing that struck me, that caused a deep sea-change in me, in my agonizing over what was to come and thinking that I just could not let go was that after hearing her, seeing her, holding her as she struggled to breathe, and paced because she hurt and felt too unwell to really rest, I felt her whole body completely relax in my arms. She was very much at peace, relaxed, and out of any pain or discomfort. I stroked her, kissed her, and told her how much I loved her as the final moments of her life slipped by. The last injection was given and as I cried and held her close Dr. Bradler reached out to me and said, "She's gone honey." By now Rachel and I were both crying, my body shook with sobs, the whole room was filled with so much emotion it was as if a cloud had surrounded us and for that moment in time we were in a sacred space in which her blessed little soul could slip out of her body and into the next dimension. In the midst of pain that cut so deep that I could not breathe there was a peace, a calm that came over the whole room. She was gone. No more would she struggle for another breath, feel any pain, she had gone to a place where a small girl was no longer blind or deaf, she had crossed The Rainbow Bridge as is said about the land that our lost animal companions go to, and for a brief moment I imagined her frolicking about, unfettered and free, happy and joyful, with other little pugs who had crossed over to play with in beautiful fields full of wild flowers, blue skies, sunshine and rainbows never-ending. It was a beautiful thought and I took great comfort in that.
I have had so many people say to me, since that night, that they didn't see how I could let go, that they just couldn't, that it would be too painful. It was painful, terribly painful, but if we really love them we are here to be their guardians, to do for them what they cannot do for themselves, to release them from the pain and suffering. It is not about we who are left behind, it is about -- and only about -- the well-being, comfort, and letting them go from this life to the next where they will suffer no more. To let go is to love so much that our own feelings are of no consequence. Only the deepest love can allow one to truly say to their beloved companion, "It's time for you to go, it's time for you to take that journey home, and I will be with you every step of the way." And so I held her as she passed and I experienced, truly, for the very first time in my life, that amazingly, truly indescribable moment when for one final second she was still my wee little Babs, looking up into my eyes, and then relaxing and drifting off to sleep in my arms, and then gone from her body. Dr. Bradler said, "She's gone," but I already knew. I had felt her leave. And that moment has changed me forever.
AFTER THE PASSING...
I had not given any thought to what would happen next. I'd had someone come and dig her grave in my little shade garden area that afternoon, inside the pink picket fence, with stepping stones to cover her grave until I could find something beautiful to plant over it, the mound of dirt was next to the hole. I had one of the long cotton seersucker dresses that I always wear to wrap her in so that she could always feel her mother with her, or so it gave me comfort to think, but before we carried her out Dr. Bradler had us do something that was so beautiful I will never forget it. She said that the other dogs needed to understand that she was gone, that they would be deeply affected by a member of their pack passing and then gone. She had each of the other pugs be brought in so that they could sniff her, and know, and they did. The most touching thing of all was the my big dog Moe, a lab-doby mix whom we had adopted at 3 months from the Humane Society and who was now 16 1/2 himself, and, much to my chagrin did not seem to care for the pugs and had even gone after them at times, nearly giving me a heart attack and causing me to go "all 'Dog Whisperer' on him," stood riveted nearby as she was put to sleep, and he laid down right next to her and even put his paw on her as she lay on my dress and didn't want to move. He seemed deeply upset that she was gone and if you ever doubt that the other dogs in the household don't know, or care, or understand, you've only to witness this. Tears just streamed down my face as my big old boy lay steadfastly next to the body of this tiny little girl who was gone from her mortal coil.
Finally Mark picked her up after Dr. Bradler wrapped her in my dress and we all walked out to her graveside. She was laid in her grave very gently and then buried, solemnly, quietly, and with Dr. Bradler on one side and my sweet daughter Rachel on the other, we all held one another and cried while she was settled into her final resting place. It was hard to even breathe, I didn't know what to do, but even then Dr. Bradler knew just what was needed. She turned to me and said, "Now tell me a funny story about Babs." And we all laughed as I told funny little things about her, and Dr. Bradler and I laughed about her last vet visits. Even as sick as she was Babs did NOT like to be held and examined, given shots, have her nails clipped, her teeth scaled, or be treated in any way needed and she would literally scream at the top of her lungs and darn it if she didn't sound like she was talking, and what she had to say I'm too much of a lady to repeat here! Ha! She was outright cussing at them! And so dark fell and we came inside, a mixture of tears, heavy hearts, and a sense of relief that I would not have to hear here struggle to breathe ever again. She now rested in perfect peace somewhere beyond this world, and it was right, it had surely been time, and I had to let go.
Grief is a funny thing. Actually as sad as I was those first days I felt mostly a kind of relief and calm because it was so heart-wrenching in those final weeks, trying hard to see that she got the right help, our dear vet trying, as I prayed and cried and carried her around, gasping myself over each labored breath. I think my own body relaxed for the first time in a long time. And then, well, these times will come of course, I walked out in the back yard with the other dogs to check the garden and I stopped dead in my tracks. I was looking at the little area that was "Babs' area," the place I always carried her out to ever since we moved here in early February. The place where I stood at the center of the carousel and she circled round and round until she found her little spots, hippity hopping around and around like a little bunny, almost with a smile on her face. But it was silent, empty, and Babs was not there. I broke down and sobbed harder than I had since she passed in my arms. I fairly howled in pain as the loss cut deep. Only then did I understand, in the depths of my being, that my tiny little black girl, the pug who started it all, was gone. The absence of her presence has left a huge hole in the tapestry of our life here, and it will never be quite the same.
And yet... I came back inside with Big Dog Moe and the three other little pugs, Sampson, Coco and Harvey. They all crowded in near me and looked at me with great concern as I wept, and then, slowly, as I calmed down they seemed to relax. Sampson curled up on the chair with me, the other dogs crawled into their beds all around me and we all fell asleep. She was gone, but they are still here, and together we move forward from here.
And so I have experienced this loss for the first time. Each time it will be heartbreaking, and I wonder how I can handle another heartbreak like this one, but I knew when I signed on for life with the seniors that this would be what I would face, loving them through the rest of their lives, and then seeing that they had safe passage from this life to the next. It is my job, my duty, my honor, and I would have it no other way, heartache and all. And she will always be in my heart, the Grand Old Lady who started me on a journey that would change my whole life. I can't help looking at her funny little face and smiling, and my fiber art shop is dedicated to her, and in her honor I will donate 20% of all profits ongoing to Mid-Atlantic Pug Rescue, and put the rest of the profits from my fiber art into a fund to help care for the other little seniors who come into my heart and home. Babs led the way. I hope I can do justice to her memory, and I will love her and miss her all the days of my life.
I love you tiny girl. Always and always and always...
Maitri, mother to the little ones, and blessed by them all...
grumpy a great deal of the time, but it was
all show. She would melt into me and soak
up all the love she could get when I scooped
her up into my arms and hugged and kissed
canoodled her puggery self...
The Final Days...
When Babs came to me she had suffered a collapsed trachea, not unusual in pugs, and I had to give her Albuterol twice a day to help her breathe. It worked pretty well until the last couple of months of her life. As she began to have a more difficult time breathing Dr. Bradler put her on medication to help the COPD that was making it harder and harder for her to breathe and to try to help her release the build up of fluid in her lungs. For the first week or so she seemed markedly better, but by the end of the second week she was going back downhill again. Not as bad as before, but not good. I continued to give her her Albuterol and we were going to give her a week or two to see how she did before following another course of treatment. Before that time came, her time came, and it was shockingly evident in those final days how fast she went downhill. I was terrified that I wouldn't know the "right time" to make the decision but Dr. Bradler told me that I would know when the time was right.
I carried her about in my arms loving her and crying. One day when the rest of us got up -- the dogs usually want to go out somewhere just before or after 6 and she would always be up and moving about waiting to be picked up and taken out and if I didn't get there fast enough she would be yowling to beat the band until I got her -- I let the other dogs out into our big fenced back yard but Babs wasn't awake. I knew that if I didn't get her out she'd likely have to go as soon as I went back to lay down again for an hour or so so I gently picked her up and carried her out. She peed and I brought her in and she went immediately back to sleep. Normally when we get up the 2nd time around 7:30 or 8 she would need to go out again too, but for the last few days of her life she would never wake up this second time, in fact it was more like 1:00 in the afternoon when she started moving about a little and I would scoop her up and carry her out. Until the end she never went to the potty in the house, and amazingly, she ate and drank well up until right before she died. In fact she was eating a little when Dr. B and Mark came to see her for the last time, but she was panting heavily and her tongue was swollen and blue. She was not getting enough oxygen and she was starting to stumble.
The day before she passed I was beside myself because she slept all day long, I could not rouse her, and I thought, "This is it." I really thought I would go in and find out that she had crossed over, but this wouldn't be the case. At 11:00 that night I left a message on Dr. Bradler's machine saying that I thought her time had come, that she had slept all day, barely moved, and I was frightened and heart-broken. Amazingly, after I called the vet, and after she had not moved all day she got up and started walking around. I picked her up and carried her outside. I had a 6' leash for her and we were like a carousel with me at the middle and Babs circling the circumference. She seemed quite secure in that she would go in a definite circle, always with just enough tension on the leash that she felt safe. When she had done what she needed to do she would stop dead in her tracks and just stand there until I picked her up. She waggled her little self when I did, and I kissed and cuddled her and told her that she was my beautiful Princess all the way in. Even in the last few months of her life, until those last weeks, I would laugh when I took her out because she would go hippity hopping around her circle like a little bunny rabbit. That last night she moved slowly, went to the bathroom, stumbling a little, and when I carried her in she actually ate a little and drank some water, but then went back to the incessant heavy panting that upset and worried me so badly that I realized when she finally did calm down and go to sleep that my body was rigid as a board and I don't think I had barely breathed at all. I knew the time was near but I still couldn't get my mind around it.
The next day was awful. She was up to go out both times early and paced and paced and paced breathing heavily ongoing. I couldn't hold back the tears as she paced and staggered and struggled to breathe. I called Dr. Bradler and said, "This is it." The time was arranged. It was 2:00 in the afternoon when the decision was made and Dr. B. and Mark would be there at 7:30 that night. I called my daughter Rachel who had been here to help tenderly
I will never forget, for the rest of my days, how incredibly loving and gentle Dr. Bradler was. She sat on a chair very near and asked me if I was ready. I said, with a heavy heart, that I was. She took a little time then to go over with us everything that might possibly happen as she was passing away as her body relaxed and when through the stages of crossing over. A heavy towel was placed on my lap in case she let go of her bowels as her body let go. It was time.
Dear Dr. Bradler came close, and Mark beside us, and she explained how the first shot would allow her to drift off into a pleasant sleep like one does when an anesthesiologist gives the anesthetic before surgery. This would soften and gentle her way through the transition. The thing that struck me, that caused a deep sea-change in me, in my agonizing over what was to come and thinking that I just could not let go was that after hearing her, seeing her, holding her as she struggled to breathe, and paced because she hurt and felt too unwell to really rest, I felt her whole body completely relax in my arms. She was very much at peace, relaxed, and out of any pain or discomfort. I stroked her, kissed her, and told her how much I loved her as the final moments of her life slipped by. The last injection was given and as I cried and held her close Dr. Bradler reached out to me and said, "She's gone honey." By now Rachel and I were both crying, my body shook with sobs, the whole room was filled with so much emotion it was as if a cloud had surrounded us and for that moment in time we were in a sacred space in which her blessed little soul could slip out of her body and into the next dimension. In the midst of pain that cut so deep that I could not breathe there was a peace, a calm that came over the whole room. She was gone. No more would she struggle for another breath, feel any pain, she had gone to a place where a small girl was no longer blind or deaf, she had crossed The Rainbow Bridge as is said about the land that our lost animal companions go to, and for a brief moment I imagined her frolicking about, unfettered and free, happy and joyful, with other little pugs who had crossed over to play with in beautiful fields full of wild flowers, blue skies, sunshine and rainbows never-ending. It was a beautiful thought and I took great comfort in that.
I have had so many people say to me, since that night, that they didn't see how I could let go, that they just couldn't, that it would be too painful. It was painful, terribly painful, but if we really love them we are here to be their guardians, to do for them what they cannot do for themselves, to release them from the pain and suffering. It is not about we who are left behind, it is about -- and only about -- the well-being, comfort, and letting them go from this life to the next where they will suffer no more. To let go is to love so much that our own feelings are of no consequence. Only the deepest love can allow one to truly say to their beloved companion, "It's time for you to go, it's time for you to take that journey home, and I will be with you every step of the way." And so I held her as she passed and I experienced, truly, for the very first time in my life, that amazingly, truly indescribable moment when for one final second she was still my wee little Babs, looking up into my eyes, and then relaxing and drifting off to sleep in my arms, and then gone from her body. Dr. Bradler said, "She's gone," but I already knew. I had felt her leave. And that moment has changed me forever.
AFTER THE PASSING...
I had not given any thought to what would happen next. I'd had someone come and dig her grave in my little shade garden area that afternoon, inside the pink picket fence, with stepping stones to cover her grave until I could find something beautiful to plant over it, the mound of dirt was next to the hole. I had one of the long cotton seersucker dresses that I always wear to wrap her in so that she could always feel her mother with her, or so it gave me comfort to think, but before we carried her out Dr. Bradler had us do something that was so beautiful I will never forget it. She said that the other dogs needed to understand that she was gone, that they would be deeply affected by a member of their pack passing and then gone. She had each of the other pugs be brought in so that they could sniff her, and know, and they did. The most touching thing of all was the my big dog Moe, a lab-doby mix whom we had adopted at 3 months from the Humane Society and who was now 16 1/2 himself, and, much to my chagrin did not seem to care for the pugs and had even gone after them at times, nearly giving me a heart attack and causing me to go "all 'Dog Whisperer' on him," stood riveted nearby as she was put to sleep, and he laid down right next to her and even put his paw on her as she lay on my dress and didn't want to move. He seemed deeply upset that she was gone and if you ever doubt that the other dogs in the household don't know, or care, or understand, you've only to witness this. Tears just streamed down my face as my big old boy lay steadfastly next to the body of this tiny little girl who was gone from her mortal coil.
Finally Mark picked her up after Dr. Bradler wrapped her in my dress and we all walked out to her graveside. She was laid in her grave very gently and then buried, solemnly, quietly, and with Dr. Bradler on one side and my sweet daughter Rachel on the other, we all held one another and cried while she was settled into her final resting place. It was hard to even breathe, I didn't know what to do, but even then Dr. Bradler knew just what was needed. She turned to me and said, "Now tell me a funny story about Babs." And we all laughed as I told funny little things about her, and Dr. Bradler and I laughed about her last vet visits. Even as sick as she was Babs did NOT like to be held and examined, given shots, have her nails clipped, her teeth scaled, or be treated in any way needed and she would literally scream at the top of her lungs and darn it if she didn't sound like she was talking, and what she had to say I'm too much of a lady to repeat here! Ha! She was outright cussing at them! And so dark fell and we came inside, a mixture of tears, heavy hearts, and a sense of relief that I would not have to hear here struggle to breathe ever again. She now rested in perfect peace somewhere beyond this world, and it was right, it had surely been time, and I had to let go.
Grief is a funny thing. Actually as sad as I was those first days I felt mostly a kind of relief and calm because it was so heart-wrenching in those final weeks, trying hard to see that she got the right help, our dear vet trying, as I prayed and cried and carried her around, gasping myself over each labored breath. I think my own body relaxed for the first time in a long time. And then, well, these times will come of course, I walked out in the back yard with the other dogs to check the garden and I stopped dead in my tracks. I was looking at the little area that was "Babs' area," the place I always carried her out to ever since we moved here in early February. The place where I stood at the center of the carousel and she circled round and round until she found her little spots, hippity hopping around and around like a little bunny, almost with a smile on her face. But it was silent, empty, and Babs was not there. I broke down and sobbed harder than I had since she passed in my arms. I fairly howled in pain as the loss cut deep. Only then did I understand, in the depths of my being, that my tiny little black girl, the pug who started it all, was gone. The absence of her presence has left a huge hole in the tapestry of our life here, and it will never be quite the same.
And yet... I came back inside with Big Dog Moe and the three other little pugs, Sampson, Coco and Harvey. They all crowded in near me and looked at me with great concern as I wept, and then, slowly, as I calmed down they seemed to relax. Sampson curled up on the chair with me, the other dogs crawled into their beds all around me and we all fell asleep. She was gone, but they are still here, and together we move forward from here.
And so I have experienced this loss for the first time. Each time it will be heartbreaking, and I wonder how I can handle another heartbreak like this one, but I knew when I signed on for life with the seniors that this would be what I would face, loving them through the rest of their lives, and then seeing that they had safe passage from this life to the next. It is my job, my duty, my honor, and I would have it no other way, heartache and all. And she will always be in my heart, the Grand Old Lady who started me on a journey that would change my whole life. I can't help looking at her funny little face and smiling, and my fiber art shop is dedicated to her, and in her honor I will donate 20% of all profits ongoing to Mid-Atlantic Pug Rescue, and put the rest of the profits from my fiber art into a fund to help care for the other little seniors who come into my heart and home. Babs led the way. I hope I can do justice to her memory, and I will love her and miss her all the days of my life.
I love you tiny girl. Always and always and always...
Maitri, mother to the little ones, and blessed by them all...
22 comments:
It is hard to lose a pet but for vets it can be hard also after caring for them so long.
This is such an incredible tribute to Babs. Thank you for sharing your heart with all of us. I have Pekingese, the Pug Cousin :-), and I know how hard it is to lose one. But, I wouldn't change it,because I loved them dearly. Every one of them.
Linda (I do the MAPR do not adopt site.)
What a beautiful tribute. I am still in tears for the loss of your beautiful little Princess! I sincerely hope time will heal your heartache. Bless you.
She was very lucky you to have found a home with you. Thank you so much for sharing this with all of us.
Thank you all so much. Your kind and tender comments mean a lot to me. It was a very hard piece for me to write and I tried several things but my little girl deserved a proper tribute and I wanted to share the end process which few people discuss so that perhaps it could inform and help people a little when their own time comes.
Blessings to each of you and thank you again, so much, for leaving your comments here...
Maitri
You made my eyes leak.
Lovely words to pay tribute to a sweet wee fursoul... :-)
Blessed Be,
VSD
I cried and cried when I read this but I can't seems to stop reading your narration of what happened to Sweet Babs...
It is so hard when they leave us, as I have a few cats of mine did .. but their memories lived on..
Be strong Maitri and Rest In Peace Babs!!
Hugs
LadyJava
Have a blessed day...
What a beautiful tribute to your baby Babs. I know how hard it is to lose what is most precious to us. She was so lucky to have you and had a wonderful life. She wouldn't want you to be too sad. Thanks for all you do for the animals! {Hugs}
You awoke my memory and made the past alive in current moment. My tears mixed with the gratitude for we are and are not alone.
When we lose our beloved, it is inappropriate to smile, but the tributes create the miracle - tears grow into the flowers. Your Little Girl and my Butterfly in the Plaster look at us and make me proud of addressing you as my dear friend. Thank you.
That was so sad I couldn't even finish it. I have lost furry friends too and it is always so painful. The comforting part is knowing they are not suffering anymore. Sorry for your loss!
I am so sorry to hear of the passing of Babs. Thankful that you two met and got to spend as much time together as you did. What a lovely telling of her.
A lovely tribute it was very poignant and well written, i kinda know how you feel having lost a pet in the passed.
my thoughts are with you.
Somebody get me some tissues!
This just broke my heart...yet it is so wonderful to know that there are other Pug Lovers out there, who are just as crazy as I am.
I am so very sorry for your loss, and so grateful that you shared this. I have a 10 year old pug named George, who has a collapsing trachea. Each time he has a episode, I pray that I will know if "its time". Thank goodness, he is doing well right now.
Bless you for opening your home and your heart, to the little four legged creatures who are in need of a forever home. You will be blessed for your kindness.
Now I am crying. I agree that this is a beautiful tribute to your sweet furbaby and to your Vet and her husband! I am very impressed with them.
Aw....what an emotional post. I visited your old bogs and your writings speak a lot about your compassionate heart and humanitarian efforts. Happily following. Would visit again. Thanks for being such an inspiration to your blogger friends.
I wish I had some words of wisdom for you at this time, but being a pet lover and one who has also lost her dearest friend, I find that you have all the wisdom you need right now. Your words and feelings touched my heart and it broke right along with yours. Bless little Babs for the wisdom and love she shared with you and the things she taught you.
It is most difficult to lose our furry friends, but it is always worth having had the time with them.
Very moving story, as I love my dog, and great writing. I worry more about humans than about the redemption of creation. The creation will be redeemed, but only a few people will hear the call.
Such a beautiful, beautiful tribute to Babs - we have two elderly cats whom love so much too and have lost cats in the past (in my heart forever though) so...I know. Am NOT, not going to cry right now, too much else going on but I did want to let you know how special this post is and you are :)
xx Lidian
What a wonderful dedication to your little friend, Maitri. You were her angel and now, she is yours. I pray your heart is a little lighter as time has passed a bit. We never forget or stop loving those little creatures who make our lives worth living.
I can't even read all this because it makes me cry. It broke my heart to read the sad parts, but uplifted me to know Babs was so fortunate to have found a home and full life with you. I know how hard this must have been to lose her.
This site is great. Thank you for sharing your heart with all of us.What a beautiful tribute to your baby Babs. I know how hard it is to lose what is most precious to us.
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