I wanted a
dog. I was 22 years old and had never had one. I’d never really had a proper
pet at all, unless you count the brief tenure of a cranky cockatiel when I was
a pre-teen or Crawford, the bizarre and spunky Wal Mart goldfish I bought on a
whim in college who lived with me for three years in various dorm rooms.
Anyway, no dogs. Matt and I had just gotten married and I made it the first
order of business after getting home from our honeymoon to head to the animal
shelter. I walked up and down the aisles until I found a smallish black dog
that acted like she’d been waiting all day for me. I asked to play with her.
The volunteer from the shelter retrieved her but explained to me that since the
dog knew her and I was a stranger, it would likely not come near me and that I
shouldn’t push. We sat down on the floor, she let go of the dog, and it made a
beeline for me. Well, that was that. Matt came to meet her and thought she was
perfect. We took her home a couple of days later and named her Annie.
Annie was
like our first child right away. By this, I do not mean we were those people
who take their dog to work every day or buy little doggie clothes. The only
time Annie ever wore clothes were the 45 unfortunate seconds on Halloween 2001
when we tried to dress her in a little sombrero and poncho. It didn’t end well
for anyone involved.
So we didn’t
indulge her terribly or treat her like a human, but we had so much fun with her. She
loved to run at top speed in large circles through the house and wrestle with
Matt’s hand. She was also content to keep a lap warm for hours. She took to
sleeping at the foot of our bed right away, and she somehow slowly altered that
arrangement so that she was sleeping at the foot of the bed INSIDE the covers.
I thought it was weird and slightly annoying, because when she would decide to
get up she moved every inch of covers to do it. Matt loved it, though—she was
like his own personal foot warmer.
When it was
time to bring Abby home from the hospital, we were a little worried. We’d read
and heard so much about dogs being unhappy about or aggressive towards tiny new
family members. We shouldn’t have fretted. Annie sniffed her a few times and
moved on. In fact, she endured all three of our children with grace, especially
considering the torture regularly inflicted on her that children refer to as “playing
with the dog.”
Now let me
be clear: Annie was not a perfect dog.
She barked every time someone came to our door. Every. Time. She barked when a
car drove too slowly by our house, or someone walked past our house. Or if it
sounded like any of those things might be happening. Or if something like that
wasn’t happening, but she was remembering a time when it had. She greeted new
people by jumping on them with joy, and more than a few guests walked away with
scratches from her over-happy paws. She chewed. Oh, did she chew. Over the
years, Matt and I replaced 17 sets of wooden blinds because she chewed them up
when she couldn’t see out a window. She got up on our dining room table when we
weren’t looking. She had a knack for waiting until I had fully settled on the
couch for the evening, blanket perfectly draped and pillows fluffed, before
whining to go out. When I’d call her to come back in, she would hide until I
gave up and closed the door, then she’d come running. She went ballistic any
time Matt stood in a chair to change a light bulb or used a fly swatter. She
ruined a lot of carpet.
But in all
her years, Annie never bit anybody. She never ran away, and she never got sick.
She greeted us with the same enthusiasm if we had been gone to work all day or
if we’d gone to the mailbox. She didn’t hold a grudge if we were cranky or let
her water bowl get empty. Juggling three kids and work and life meant that we
sometime didn’t give her the attention she deserved, but she loved us every
minute anyway.
Last
Thursday night, Matt and I noticed that Annie wasn’t acting like herself. Matt
took her to the vet Friday afternoon. He examined Annie and told Matt
that she had advanced lymphoma and that it had spread to most of her organs
already. Mercifully she was likely not in any pain yet, but our timing was lucky—he
said that she probably had around a week left before her condition became
extremely painful and would take her life shortly after. He recommended that we
put her down by the following Monday to avoid having her suffer.
We were
devastated. We knew that she was 14 years old and that’s a long run for a dog like
her, and we definitely didn’t want to watch her hurt. But it seemed unthinkable
to move forward without Annie. We told the kids, which was at the same time
incredibly painful and beautiful, to see them choose to put aside their sadness to
be resolute in wanting what was best for her. I’m pretty sure Annie thought
aliens had taken over our bodies for the weekend, because we spent it spoiling
her—she was carried around everywhere and given a good portion of whatever we
ate. (The acquisition and consumption of “people food” was a lifelong source of
joy for Annie).
On Monday morning, Matt and I held Annie and told her we loved
her while she left the world. I feel sure that for all the sorrow I have left
to experience in this life, only a few moments will match that heartache. I don’t
know how long it will be before I can think about her leaving us and not cry,
but it’s sure not going to be any time soon. If her purpose on this earth was
to be in our family and love us well, then she exceeded all expectations. I can
only hope that she knew how much she was loved back.
2 comments:
Tears for you and your family. Annie was a lucky girl, as were you all to have had her for 14 years. Rest in Peace Annie.
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