An old dog can teach an old dog new tricks
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My crotchety old lady dachshund, Coco, has been remarkably healthy
throughout her long life. But in keeping with her program to shape us
up periodically, her handful of health emergencies have all taken
place either on weekends, holidays or both. The most recent was over
Memorial Day.
When she didn’t respond to our calls on that Saturday, we went
looking and found her dragging herself painfully through the grass in
our backyard with her head cocked at a sharp angle, as if she were
listening intently to something we were saying. The signs clearly
suggested a stroke, and our vet was shut down for the holiday. So we
bundled her up and took her to the nearest emergency clinic.
The doctor on duty, a philosophical sort, verified the possibility
of a stroke, but said all of her life signs were strong. He gave her
a shot of something and told us to take her to her regular vet when
they were back in business. He also asked Coco’s age, and after we
told him she was almost 16 years old, I could only hope that she
couldn’t hear us because we are careful not to talk about her age in
front of her.
But I thought about it a lot over the next few days when we
coddled her, carried her up and down steps and allowed her privileges
normally denied her. She wouldn’t touch any food and her head
remained cocked, but she slowly regained the use of her legs. By the
time we got her to her regular doctor, she was walking almost
normally.
So instead of suggesting any draconian measures or making
extensive tests, her vet sent us home with several medications to be
tapered off and a new diagnosis. Coco’s problem, she said, is
probably Old Dog Syndrome, and we should delay any further treatment
while keeping a close eye on how she does.
Well, as it turns out, she’s doing just fine. The only thing left
of the original symptoms is a slight tilt of her head, which is
somewhat off-putting because she seldom pays much attention to what
we say to her, especially if it’s something she doesn’t want to hear.
This is probably in equal parts deafness and bullheadedness, and has
been going on for a long time.
It was also suggested to us that we carry her up and down stairs,
including the two up to our kitchen door. This was first recommended
by the vet six years ago when Coco was having some back problems and
pushing 70 in human age. It never worked, and we gave it up quickly.
Blocking the steps only incited her to get over or around the
barriers. She won that one hands down.
She will soon be 112 in human years, and we’ve had to restrain her
since her last trip to the vet from jumping up on couches four times
her height, which she has demonstrated she can still do. One other
residue of her crisis is occasional incontinence, which could also be
caused by her irritation with us for some slight or our ignoring her
calls for help.
She’s eating voraciously again -- anything she can get her tiny
jaws around -- and she flies up and down the steps to reach her food,
but drags up pitifully if it is leading to something she doesn’t want
to do. And she looks at the world, which she neither hears nor sees
very well, with her head cocked. Maybe it will always be that way.
Meanwhile, I’ve switched to pondering the Old Dog Syndrome and how
it applies to my life. Coco has been a role model for me ever since
she started to reach and then pass my age. We are both hard of
hearing, stubborn, a little slippery, iconoclastic and enjoy the
small events of life. I’m sure she would like baseball if she could
still see.
She seems to sense that we share these qualities because she hangs
out with me most of the time. When she isn’t sleeping, she will often
just sit and watch me, ready to move the instant I do. I find this a
little disconcerting since it implies more dependence on me than I
care to take on. I’ve caught myself more than once telling this
ancient creature who was tagging me about to “get a life.”
But since I’ve been introduced to Old Dog Syndrome, I’ve been
reversing our relationship. Now, I’ve taken to watching Coco and
trying to figure out what she can teach me. I figure anybody who
reaches 112 and still jumps four times her height must have some
secret of longevity that is worth exploring.
So far, I’ve perceived that the most obvious component of her
behavior that contributes to this secret is the cavalier way she
refuses to acknowledge the limitations that most of us embrace
routinely with age. She still runs frantically about the house when
we return from an evening out, is contemptuous of physical challenges
that interest her, and joins every barking chorus of neighborhood
dogs. I’m not suggesting that this should inspire me to take up
running the hurdles again, which would be stupid. But Coco does seem
to be telling me that maybe tennis isn’t out of reach, and I don’t
have to buy automatically into the politically correct limitations of
aging -- at least without a fight.
She also offers a different slant on what we like to call common
sense. Her refusal to accept the barriers on the stairway is a case
in point. That told us, finally, that we should leave her alone to
find her own parameters of behavior. If she failed, she’d either keep
trying or move on. And as long as that search wasn’t hurting anyone
else, why not?
There’s a certain amount of risk involved and always the
possibility of failure or rejection. But she’s in charge and telling
me that anyone -- dachshund or human -- suffering from Old Dog
Syndrome who wants to take that risk should give it a shot.
So I’m adopting Coco’s laissez-faire attitude toward aging. I’m
not sure how it will play out, but it’s going to be a lot more fun
while it lasts.
For starters, it will add to the enjoyment of the trip my wife and
I are taking to visit old friends in North Carolina for my birthday
on the Fourth of July.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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