For now, it just hurts
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There is a tiny dog bed in my office. It sits at the base of my
bookcase, a few feet away from my desk chair. It is covered with
black faux fur and a shabby green blanket. Bare spots attest to its
long life and use, and there are fragments of leaves embedded in its
fur.
It is empty.
For many of her 16 years, our long-haired dachshund hausfrau
monitored her world of certitude from that bunker, her nose propped
on the edge, her soulful eyes mostly fixed on me when she was awake,
but ready to turn, at instant notice, with outrage on any outside
violation of her space.
Sitting now at my desk, if I look long enough and hard enough at
her bed, the emptiness fuzzes, and her liquid brown eyes -- so filmed
over in recent years that I was never sure what she was seeing -- are
still on me, demanding nothing but a soft word of recognition that
she can sense through my body language, which is enough to set her
tail wagging.
Coco died two weeks ago, and -- until now -- I haven’t been able
to put these words down. She finally struck a reef she couldn’t
navigate. The resilience and determination and refusal to become
sedentary that had carried her through a steadily more frequent
series of afflictions finally proved too much for her stout heart.
And so we lost her.
The instant you bring a puppy into your home and heart, you are
setting yourself up for what we are now going through. We had a
longer run than most, but that doesn’t make the end any easier. I’m
not comforted by the cliches -- that she was very old, that death
comes to us all, that she lived a full life, that the suffering of
her last few days has mercifully been lifted from her. All true. But
right now, they don’t change the ache that tells me how much I miss
her, and so I demand the right to feel that ache without trying to
soften her loss.
I never wanted this dog, an apostasy that Coco forgave me many
years ago. I wanted a male dog I could roughhouse with and show off
to the men in my neighborhood. Coco was foisted on me by my wife and
stepson when I was away on a trip. I came home to this overgrown
wharf rat, embarrassed at the certain contempt she would produce from
my neighbors out walking their good old hound dawgs.
Coco solved this problem by simply refusing to walk. She would get
very excited when we hooked up her leash, then would sit in the
gutter and refuse to move when we got her outside. So my wife and
stepson took her to discipline school. She came home with a diploma,
a score of 176, and still refused to walk. I was never able to find
out how 176 translated into performance at school, but Coco carried
that 176 proudly as a banner throughout her long life. Somewhere down
the line, I realized 176 meant that she would deal with life pretty
much on her own terms, and we’d all get along better if we understood
that up front.
Coco was the first joint love affair of a new family still feeling
its way. We all grew with her, and if she felt this responsibility,
she must have rejoiced in her last days to see where she was leaving
it. For this unity, alone, she will be gratefully remembered.
But there is so much more. Coco’s entire universe was our house
and its spacious backyard. It is impossible to set foot anywhere
within her habitat without bringing up vivid memories of the life she
lived.
When we come home late at night and open the garage door to our
patio, she’s not there waiting, so furiously happy we’re home that
she forgives the late hour.
The sparrows still gather at her supper hour. We fed her outside
because she was a sloppy eater, and when she had her immediate fill,
she sat aside and watched the birds swarm over her bowl, comfortable
in her own generosity while I exhorted her to protect her territorial
rights.
Her face no longer appears framed in her dog house entrance, where
she retreated when we chastened her, then followed us with her eyes
from the doorway, telling us she was willing to overlook our
unreasonable behavior.
My wife and I now have the entire bed to sleep in rather than the
half we had to make do with to accommodate Coco on the other half. We
still sleep on our half. We don’t talk about it, but perhaps neither
of us wants to close out the hope that when we wake up, she’ll be
there.
And she was funny. Just those short legs plowing through high
grass was funny, but she also had some ridiculously excessive habits.
She may have been the only dog in the universe to be regularly
rewarded with a cookie for relieving herself. I have no idea how that
started, but proper performance at her bedtime toilet got her a
treat, and she learned over time to stretch that into two or three
performances. We are told that she multiplied this number when we
left her with house sitters.
Whatever and wherever dog heaven is, Coco is sure to be there,
because that’s where she has always lived. In all her life, Coco
never encountered evil and thus had no knowledge of it. No person or
animal ever tried to hurt her, and on the few occasions she
encountered strangers with uncertain motives, she rolled over on her
back and wiggled her paws in the air. And her vulnerability was never
violated.
The other day, my wife was away for the afternoon, and I was
sitting at my desk trying to write and drifting instead. And suddenly
it hit me, like a fist in the stomach, that I was alone. This is
scarcely new. I’m alone a lot. But this feeling was different. I was
really, really alone. My dear friend who demanded little of me, but
seldom left my side was not in her bed, watching me.
And I realized the thing I missed most was her presence. It was
deeply embedded in the mosaic of my life, and there is a substantial
void where it has been ripped out. In time, we will realize that her
presence will never go away, and we will rejoice in that. Right now,
it just hurts.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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