Just one girl trying to not to drop anything too important...

Sunday, May 31, 2009

Fun Days






The end of May is here, and with that comes Hockinson Fun Days! I had to miss the parade this year because of my Saturday morning biology lab, but we hit the pancake breakfast at the firehouse by 7:30 AM and then rounded out the day with some fun over at Oscars. I love when that time of year comes when we grab a cold bottle of wine, load the kids onto the lawn tractor and go a-visiting up and down the street. (In the one photo, there's a good view of Oscar and Deborah's McDonald's Playland. No wonder Oscar is now Maggie's favorite neighbor.) They also have some baby robins that are conveniently hanging out in a tree adjacent to the playground, only about 5 feet off the ground for easy viewing.




Thursday, May 28, 2009

One Week without Farley




It's been about a week since old Farley went to the green, sunny field in the sky that we call Doggie Heaven around here. And, life is going on - the weather has been fabulous (so it hasn't been too hard to think of him spending the night out in the yard (if that makes any sense). In this week, I've been struck by how life is different without him.

I feel a lot like I've lost my shadow. For fifteen years, whenever I went from one room to another, he dragged himself along. Now, when I go to take a shower, I can close the bathroom door right away instead of waiting for him to follow along. It had gotten to where I'd feel extra bad if I only had to run into a room for something - knowing he'd follow, lie down and then be forced to drag himself up right away to follow me somewhere else.

I'm not sure what to do with the leftovers. An extra piece of toast at breakfast? Unfinished piece of pizza? I guess they go in the trash because Happy Cat just looks at me funny when I drop them on the floor.

There's no faintly dog-shaped spot on the carpet at the foot of our bed anymore because nobody's lying there shedding all night long.

I don't sit down on wet toilet seats anymore because nobody (thankfully) is nosing up the lid, having a drink and slobbering toilet water all over.

There's nobody here to bark at the house ghosts or the yard spirits anymore. He was great at that. Some people may have assumed he was just barking at the air, but I know better.

I think Maggie has assumed the role of Most Prolific Farter - and let me tell you - those are big shoes she's going to have to fill.

It's just weird being without the stinky, lumpy, gimpy, loyal, handsome pup.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Diggin' for Friskies


Ellie and Mags were on the porch when I heard a bit of commotion. Nothing too crazy, mind you, just enough to know that something was up. When I inquired as to what might be amiss, Ellie was kind enough to say, "Cat food up by dose." Then she giggled. And, thus began the search for tweezers, the extraction attempts (her nostrils are kind of small) and the end result on the tip of the pincers without a single tear or even darkening of anyone's mood. They don't teach this stuff in Mommy School.

Monday, May 18, 2009

A Tough Month

I remember a bright summer day fifteen years ago. I was back in Jersey, and Farley, my puppy, had been horribly injured – or at least I thought he had. Like many rambunctious black lab youngsters, he had a penchant for digging in the back yard. There were hidden hazards all around the back yard that could cause twisted ankles, spilled drinks, etc – the reminders of other sunny afternoons and forgotten digging frenzies. On this day, I was inside and heard Farley crying in pain in the yard. I was home alone with him, and I ran outside to help. As he lay crumpled in the yard, he looked at me with eyes that said, “For the love of God, I am HURT! HURT BADLY! I CAN’T MOVE!” I called the veterinarian in a panic. “My dog! He’s injured! I need to bring him in right away!” I made arrangements to take him in and then steeled myself for the task of lifting him from the yard, through the house and into my car. I drove as if I were transporting a woman in the final stages of labor, pulling into the veterinary clinic in five minutes flat. I carried him in – he was probably 45 pounds at this point and very gangly. I explained the situation – “I think he tripped in one of his own holes, and he seems to be in a great deal of pain.” The staff just smiled at me, and I admit by this point, Farley was looking a bit sheepish. The vet explained that Farley probably had no memory of pain in the past and that he was just over-reacting a little. Relieved, we made the trip home a little slower – after I made him walk himself back to the car using the four paws that he’d been born with.

Years have passed, and Farley has outlived the average life-span of a big dog by quite a bit. His hips have bothered him for a long time, but he has soldiered on, even as his pace has slowed and his joints have stiffened. We give him a combination of medicines to ease his discomfort and to keep him as limber as possible. Intellectually, we know that he’s REALLY, REALLY OLD. But, he still gets a little bounce in his step when he sees my car pulling in the driveway and he ambles down to the neighbor’s house to visit his dog friends and mark a few trees. At least, he did all that until yesterday. I don’t know what happened – if he tripped in a hole or if he’s simply getting more and more lame, but now it’s not just his hips that are causing problems. His front leg at the “elbow” is swollen and he can’t really put any weight on that limb. It’s pathetic to watch a dog with stiff hips try to use his one good appendage to guide himself along on our slippery hard wood floors. He’s looking up at me with the same eyes as when he was a silly puppy, but there’s no panic in them now – just cataracts. He doesn’t look scared, and I do wonder if he’s trying to tell me something. He knows what getting old feels like now, and I guess it’s just a matter of trying to tell when he’s had enough. We had to put our cat to sleep last week. He was old, but spry and then got an illness that just sucked the joy out of him and replaced it with wheezing and discomfort. I think we had anticipated that Farley would be the next in the line of pet attrition, but that’s not how it went, and when you lose one you figure the others in line should get a bye for at least a while… I don’t know that that will be the case for us. Maggie, full of the curiosity and simplicity of a four-year old has started looking at stuffed animals and saying, “He’s dead. She’s dead.” Then she looks at Farley and says, “Mom, when is Farley going to die?” as if she wants to put it on her calendar. This morning she said, “Mom, Farley’s dead. Really, I’m not kidding.” And honestly, when I went back into the bedroom to check on him, I hoped she was right. Why do pets always seem to make us make the tough call? Why can’t they just die in their sleep in the middle of a dream about running through a sunny field or swimming after a Frisbee in a warm lake?

The weather’s just getting nice – days are longer and the sky is blue more than gray – not the truncated rainy days of winter that you’d expect to get under a dog’s fur and cause problems. Our schedules are busy with play dates and cookouts and the normal responsibilities and detritus that fill a family’s days. It’s hard to stop my normal running around and think “Am I going to have to make a tough decision about this dog today?” I have an appointment to take him in this afternoon to see what they recommend – maybe a shot of something to ease the pain in his elbow? Or maybe I’m just kidding myself. It’ll be all right whatever – as long as I can look into those cloudy old eyes and know as best as I can that we’re on the same page.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Goggles, etc.

I'm wondering if maybe I should go throughout my days wearing my goggles from chemistry lab. They rarely seem to serve any purpose in there (Would it HURT to get table salt in one's eye?) - however, I did just manage to squirt Farley's steroid-based hip arthritis medicine into my eye when I leaned in and over-enthusiastically discharged the little plunger too close to his tongue and with my face too close to his mouth. The medicine deflected off his tongue and into my face. Had I been wearing my goggles - incident averted. However, right now that pesky ache in my shoulder has completely disappeared. I do have a desire to chase the cat, and I'm a tad drooly.

Ellie and I took Mags to her pediatric dentist today, which basically is like going to Disney World except the toys and snacks are covered by insurance without out-of-pocket expense. The waiting room has a giant flat-screen TV, nearly every toy from the latest Pottery Barn Kids catalog and a train that the kids can make circle the perimeter of the ceiling by pushing a giant red button on the wall. They can draw on giant rolls of paper hanging from the wall, choose the party favor of their choice to take home from the toy closet, and snack on frozen yogurt pops. Mags has been to this dentist a few times before and was looking forward to today - "I don't want you and Ellie to come in with me..." So, I sent her off with the hygienist - I peeked in on her 20 minutes later and she was laid out on the chair, purple sunglasses on her face, patent leather-clad shoes resting gently on a small pillow... while her teeth were cleaned, photographed, treated with fluoride, flossed, polished... The girls going to LOVE spas someday. Ellie just liked the giant Mickey and Minnie Mouse near the door and the popsicles. I mentioned to Jay that we should think about taking her to the dentist soon, and he said, "Maybe she wouldn't mind going to our dentist..." As if. That's like sending one kid to Princeton and the other to community college. (Not that there's ANYTHING wrong with community college...)

Jay and I went to a concert in Portland last Wednesday night - and it wasn't the symphony! We went to see The Shins at the Crystal Ballroom (a venue that I've wanted to visit since I moved to the NW - because of the legendary floating floor...) The concert started at 9:00 - with an opening band - and ended at midnight. On a school night. When I had a test the next day and a babysitter who's still in high school at our house. So, I paid for it. Standing in one spot for nearly four hours didn't bode well for my old back, and staying up until nigh on 1 in the morning caused me to miss not one but more like two nights of studying. But, I would probably do it again just to prove that I can still hang with the teeny boppers. It was good fun, especially since the ballroom is a McMenamins and half the room was roped off for "over-21" people who could consume the resident brew.

On a final note for now, this cold rain sucks and although it's been interspersed with lovely weather... it's just not enough dammit. I Want Sunshine and Warmth. (Of course this weekend it's supposed to be 90 degrees...)

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Atticus

Our perfect companions never have fewer than four feet...
Colette