It's 3:15 on a warm summer morning in 2006. Something awakens me. The sound of the breeze through the open
windows? The faint bark of a small
neighbor dog down the road? Maybe just the overall peacefulness in this
room.
I'll get up for a drink of water. I listen before swinging my legs out of
bed. He's down there on the floor in the
blackness, next to me, and the last thing I want to do is bump him and disturb
the peace he's finally demonstrating by his stillness.
It took him a long time to get settled tonight. Arthritis and the stress of aging are taking
their toll. Lots of restlessness, heavy
panting, turning in circles, groaning as he finally flops down, and then
getting up and starting the whole process over again. It's the same procedure I go through when I'm
trying to get my pillows adjusted "just right." Sometimes there simply is no "just right,” and attempts to improve a situation just
lead to frustration and more restlessness.
But he's quiet now, finally.
I can hear his deep, rhythmic breathing.
I reach an arm down to gently locate his positioning and determine where
his head is and where his legs are. My
hands make contact with a body that feels almost foreign to me. So different from what I've felt for most of
the past 11 years with him! I touch his
hip...or is it his shoulder? The hair
is shorter, sparser, courser these days.
His body has lost so much of its muscle tone and definition that I can't
even tell which quarter of him I'm feeling!
I can identify nearly every bone directly under the skin. My hands slide up his body until I locate his
neck, that one area still so soft and plush and full, and I gently massage the
skin for a moment before finally getting the courage to lower my legs to the
floor. I know where he is now, and can
get up without disturbing him. As my
feet land and I stand up, I realize, ironically, that he is so restful at this
moment that hardly anything could disturb him.
These days, when he's out, he's really out. I could have stepped on him and he'd scarcely
stir. For that, I am grateful.
He's leaving me. He's
fading away, ever so slowly. It's more
than just muscle tone. It's his mind,
too. While generally healthy, he's also
very elderly. His cognitive abilities
are decreasing. He hears selectively, if
at all. His priorities have
changed. Meals and naps are his main
interests. He must get up now, almost
every night, and be let outside to go to the bathroom. Negotiating the doggy door by himself is
difficult, so we patiently get up to help him whenever he needs it. This is the least we can do, in exchange for
11 wonderful years of his service to us as a watchdog, award-winning athlete, and companion extraordinaire.
The aging process is so humbling, and yet so graceful and
natural. Our dogs teach us what to
expect for ourselves, and how to tolerate our own "winding down" experience. They say, "Accept yourself. Enjoy what you can. Wherever you are, be all there. Each day and each moment is a gift to be
relished to the fullest extent. Become childlike again."
My old dog is still slumbering as I return to bed. Once again, I reach down to locate him. I stroke his front leg, down to a big paw
which I cradle in my hand for a moment.
I think about all the hundreds of miles of mountain trails and dog show
parking lots those paws have negotiated with me. About all the motel rooms and travel
adventures we've shared. About all the
unusual and challenging things I've asked those paws to do for me over the
years. And about how faithful and
unwavering they have been in their devotion to me.
For most of his life, I was my dog's teacher. Now he teaches me. Age gracefully, and with gusto. Be proud of a life well lived. Look forward to an eternity of exploring the
universe.
Rest well this night, my old friend. And thank you for
showing me the way.
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