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Dealing with the Loss of a Pet - You Are NOT Alone


BRIAN MCGRORY

Brown eyes of wisdom
By Brian McGrory, Globe Columnist August 31, 2004
 
They should come with a warning label, these creatures. They should
come with a label that says you're going to fall hopelessly in love,only
to have your heart shattered before you could ever possibly prepare.
 
And then you face one of life's truly wrenching decisions.
 
Which is where I am now. Specifically, as I type these words I am
on the back deck of a rented house in Maine surrounded by fields and
forest, watching a sleeping golden retriever named Harry drift another day
closer to death.
 
He is gorgeous, this dog, with a gray face that shows the wisdom
gained from his 10 years on Earth and brown eyes that are the most thoughtful
I've ever seen. He is sprawled out on the wood, his blond fur damp from his
morning swim and his breathing labored from his disease.
 
And I ponder the question that has dominated my thoughts for weeks:
How will I know when the time is right?
 
He arrived in my life nearly a decade ago on one of those storybook
Christmas season nights that is too good to ever forget. He was a gift
to my wife, and when she opened the box the tears that spilled down her
face were those of joy.
 
Women, of course, come and go, but dogs are forever, so when the
marriage ended, Harry stayed with me. Since then, we've moved from
Boston to Washington, D.C., and back again, fetched maybe a quarter of a
million throws, walked, I would wager, over 10,000 miles together. He carried a
tennis ball in his mouth for most of them, convinced that anyone who
saw him would be duly impressed. And, judging by their reactions, he's
right.
 
Throughout, he has shown me sunrises and sunsets that I wouldn't
otherwise have seen. He has taught me that snow is a gift, that the
ocean is there for swimming, that the coldest winter mornings and the hottest
summer days are never as bad as people say.
 
He has introduced me to people, kind people, whom I otherwise
wouldn't have met. He has forced me to take time every morning to contemplate
the day ahead. With his tail-swishing swagger, he has taught me to slow
down, to pause in an Esplanade field or on a Public Garden bench, the journey
being as good as the destination. The big ruse, which I think he
figured out years ago, was that all these walks were meant for him.
 
He has been an anchor in bad times, a ballast amid occasional
uncertainty, a dose of humility when things might be going a little too
well. He has been a sanctuary, a confidant, and an occasional excuse.
He regards it as his personal mission to make me laugh, whether by a
ritualistic dance over a pig's ear or a gushing lick to my face. He's
never once said the wrong thing, and it's impossible to be in a bad mood
around him.
 
All along, he lives by one simple mantra: Count me in. Anything I'm
doing, he wants to do as well, no leash or nagging required. At home,
he prefers to lie on the stoop of our condominium building, presiding over
the world around him.
 
His time, though, is fleeting, a fact that he's starting to
understand. In April, his lifelong veterinarian, Pam Bendock, blinked back tears as
she informed me that his stomach pains were caused by lymphoma. Several
rounds of chemotherapy failed to do what was hoped. Two weeks ago, I stopped
his treatments.
 
These days, he has lost 10 pounds or more and can't keep food
inside. He often wakes in the dark before dawn moaning softly in pain. But by
daybreak, he is urging me toward the beach or guiding me on another
walk, ball in mouth, ready to fetch, albeit slowly.
 
Maybe I should be embarrassed to admit that a dog can change a man,
but I'm not. So as the clock winds out on a life well lived, I look back at
the lessons learned from this calm and dignified creature, lessons of
temperance, patience, and compassion that will guide us to the end.
 
And I look into those handsome brown eyes for the sign that the
time has come. He'll give it to me, when he's ready. And hard as it will be,
we'll both know the journey was better than we could have ever possibly
hoped.
 
Brian McGrory is a Globe columnist. He can be reached at
 
(c) Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company