Tag Archives: dog

Kali, A Good Dog

May 21, 2015

This morning I put Kali’s ashes to rest under the witch hazel, in the Secret Garden that was one

of Kali’s favorite spots on a hot day. It was gray and raining lightly, but four years ago today

when Kali came to live with me, it was a clear day full of sunshine. I had driven to her foster

home in northern Maryland to pick her up. She was happy to go in the car–I would soon learn

that Kali was always happy to go in the car–and settled down in the backseat while I drove to

Olney to pick up Emma. Emma declared her a “sausage dog” and it was true Kali was

overweight and not the trim Brittany spaniel she would become.

I had read that dogs do not understand that they are traveling distances when going places by

car, and that when introducing a dog to a new home, you should walk the dog there. And so I

parked the car at the turnaround, and the three of us walked the rest of the way, Kali tugging

and straining on the leash. Despite being ten years old, she did not know how to heel or stay or

come. She knew how to sit, though that was hard with her hip dysplasia and arthritis, and she

knew how to pick up a paw on command.

Bringing Kali into my home was one of the best things I could have done. Bill had been dead not

quite a year, and I was emerging out of the fog of the first year of grief into the second year of

mourning, when you realize that there is no magic, he is not coming back, this is how it is going

to be forever. Kali brought me the unconditional love of a sweet dog. I soon learned that Kali’s

one mission in life was keeping track of me. When we were outside as we were much of the

time in good weather, she would wander a bit in the fenced yard, sniffing out chipmunks and

squirrels, but she soon would come bounding back to find me. Now and then she lost me and

would go to the kitchen door and bark, thinking I had gone inside. Then I had to call her, or lay

down my gardening tools and go retrieve her. When I went swimming, she would pace around

the pool anxiously. Most Brittany spaniels like the water, but not Kali.

Inside my small house, Kali stayed close to me, and I bought three beds to keep her old bones

comfortable in the living room, study, and bedroom. The family room was off limits to her, as it

was the cats’ gated refuge, but if I went in there to watch television I would snap on her leash

and hitch her to the ottoman leg: her whining at the gate had worn me down. At bedtime I was

comforted by her gentle snoring on the floor by my bedside, though sometimes I was awakened by

her yipping and her paws scratching against the wall while she pursued a chipmunk in her

dreams.

When I returned home from errands or activities, Kali greeted me at the door, stubby tail

wagging. During her last year, she no longer got off her living room bed to greet me, but simply

raised her head alertly. Now and then I knelt on her bed to rub her belly and cuddle her, with a

doggy smile as my reward.

One morning in January, Kali had great difficulty getting to her feet and then in walking. She

settled on her bed in the study, and although she got to her feet twice, tail wagging hard, she did not

walk. She drank a little water but wanted no food. “Stroke,” said the vet when he came to

the house the next day, and gave her the injection to ease her out of this world, while I cradled

her head and wept. “You’re a good dog, Kali, a very good dog,” I told her.

FullSizeRender (4)And that is what I told her again this morning, while I patted the dirt firmly over the velveteen bag holding her ashes, and the stuffed toy that came with her when I adopted her. And that is what the stone says that marks her resting place: Kali A Good Dog.

The Slings and Arrows of Outrageous Fortunes

February 24, 2015

I have not posted anything for weeks because I have been steamrolled by circumstances. January 17-19 a crew was here to improve the insulation levels in my attic. They cleaned out the old insulation and sprayed in open-cell foam and cellulose insulation. Money well spent, I think, but a week later I discovered hot water running down the inside of one bank of kitchen cupboards. One of the crew had accidentally whacked a hot water pipe in the attic, a water pipe critical for my hot water baseboard heating system. The repairs were expensive and messy, involving cutting holes in the kitchen and bathroom ceilings. My electric wall oven also was damaged. The insulation company took responsibility but I have yet to see a check from their insurance company for my expenses. Repair crews were tracking in and out of here for days.

When one bad thing happens, it is harder to be resilient when the next trouble hits. The snow plow crew tore up the tar and chip driveway that was installed last August, plowing the top layer of granite chips into big piles at the top of my driveway. They will fix it, but it is frustrating to see work undone.

A few days later I found tiny holes in the wood paneling of my living room; I suspect the termites are back and am waiting for the termite inspector.

I reminded myself that it was just a home and driveway, just things, and that my loved ones were all right. And then my sweet old dog woke up one morning and could not walk without falling down. My farewell to Kali will follow in another post.

The British have a saying: “Mustn’t fuss, could be worse.” I will keep that in mind.