You Dog-Blasted Ornery No-Account Varmint

Violet’s been on Trazodone for a long time now to keep her calm while the knee heals.

(By the way, I went to my vet on Thursday. “No, it’s not normal for her to be limping still. Call the vet school.” I called the vet school. “We’re closed Thursday and Friday to move to our new facility.”

Rattin rittin hittin bloatsum!)

You may remember when I tried to switch to Benadryl for a day. Fail.

Anyway, she’s been tranq’ed up for months. Yesterday, I ran out of peanut butter to smear on the pills, and I was gonna go to the grocery store, but then I didn’t, and then I forgot to give her her quaaludes. Guess what happened.

Those were prescription sunglasses.

This morning, I tossed her pills in ranch dressing, and she slurped ’em down. Wish I’d thought of that yesterday.

Unsure of Everything

I watched a robin die this morning.

Maybe a robin. I’m not good at identifying birds. At identifying anything. Trees, flowers, feelings, appropriate mates.

Redford was barking at the ground. I thought, “That’s about right.” But when I went out into the yard, there lay a flickering, floppity robin, its mouth opening in quick, wide yawns. I shooed Redford away and ran inside to get some Saran wrap. I didn’t have any rubber gloves, and I had heard that birds carry disease. Did I hear that? Maybe. Maybe I made it up.

I covered my hand in the plastic and picked up the bird. Its body was warm and weighed nothing. Nothing. How does an animal survive when it weighs zero pounds, zero ounces?

Its bird friends shrieked at me as I took it out of the back yard and placed it on the mulch. “I have to get ready for work,” I thought, but I stood there in my bathrobe, in my driveway, watching its beak open and close.

When I was eight or nine, I watched my cat Scratch (sister of Patch, of course) do the same thing. A speedy CRX came around the blind curve in front of my house and tagged her. She sprinted out of the road, which made me think she was OK. But when I followed her, I found her lying behind a tree, mouth opening and closing.

What is that? Why do animals do that? Will I, when the time comes?

Anyway, I watched a robin die today.

It wasn’t a very good day.

Dear Redford, Part 5

Lately, I’ve been walking you the two miles to the gym and letting you make friends with the CrossFitters while I work out, before walking you back home again. You love the CrossFitters. You kiss them and smile at them and wag wag wag the whole WOD so they know you’re proud of their efforts.

All smiles all the time.

A lot of them will give you a scratch on the head or a belly-rub. You do your signature move. And then if they sit down on the ground next to you, you understand that they mean for you to sit in their laps. So you do.

Coach Phil always has a long conversation with you about how handsome you are and how it’s OK to lick wherever you can reach. It reminds me of that scene in Parenthood when Tod (Keanu Reeves) tells Helen (Diane Weist) that the conversation with her son went well: “I told him that’s what little dudes do.” I guess you could probably use a dad. I tell you all the time how handsome you are, but I never thought to tell you the part about the licking your junk.

Yesterday, you did the WOD with me. Part of it anyway. It started with running a mile and ended with running a mile. The stuff in between required opposable thumbs so you just sat outside looking cute. (Which you did Rx.) We did the first mile in under twelve minutes. The second took fifteen. You would’ve gone a lot faster except that (1) you were tethered to my slow ass and (2) you had to stop to poop twice.

Recovery after the WOD.

You’re quite the athlete, little man.

Love,

Amy

Agita

It’s been more than two weeks since Violet’s meniscus surgery. Sixteen since her ACL surgery. I’ve had her cooped up in the spare bedroom for four months, and she’s been beleaguered by the Cone of Shame for, it seems like, forever.

And she’s still limping.

It would be one thing if she were limping in a different way, if it looked like a recovery limp. But it doesn’t. Her limp looks EXACTLY the same as before I spent close to five grand, and many moons wringing my hands, and before I consumed whole days’ worth of calories in minutes. Which is what I’ve done pretty much every day for the last six weeks. (Because if your only tool is a hammer, the whole world looks like a nail. My only tool is overeating, so all my problems look like they could use some pudding.)

I’m getting a little…what’s the word?…

Vexed.

Perturbed.

Disquieted.

Edgy.

Goats and monkeys!

 

The Wednesday of EOGs

It’s the Wednesday of End-of-Grade test week. But it’s not May 20.

In 2009, Wednesday of EOG week was May 20. May 20 will be on a Wednesday again in 2015. And then in 2020, 2026, 2037, 2043… Assuming I live to be 100, will I remember in 2076? Will I even remember after I stop administering the EOGs?

I don’t know, but this year the anniversary is just the Wednesday of EOGs.

Because for some reason my grief is tied not to the date but to the day, to the midweek fatigue, and to the drone of my own voice: “Today you will take the End-of-Grade Mathematics—Calculator Active test. Make sure your pencils are #2 and are sharpened. Choose the best answer from the choices provided, and darken the circle that matches your choice on your answer sheet.”

Also to the sense memory of those first days of the year when my lip beads with sweat just picking up a bag of Purina out of my car, the itch of those new mosquito bites and spots of poison ivy, the wafts of honeysuckle.

I went home from work that Wednesday, May 20, and saw the pile of recycling I’d left in the driveway. “I’ll have to go to the dump when we get back from our hike,” I thought, but of course I wouldn’t get back until almost 9:00pm.

Six hours later, at 3:00am, I woke up and started to write. I went to school on Thursday pressing a cold, damp washcloth to my bloodshot eyes every time something started bubbling up, and administered the last day of the EOGs. “My allergies are acting up,” I told the kids. Then I left when they went out for recess, and I didn’t return until the following Monday.

I can’t say his death was in vain because it’s the reason I started writing this blog, and writing this blog has given me my life. But I also can’t say I wouldn’t give it up if it meant having him back.

Thursday, May 21, 2009, 3:00am

Dear Boone,

You spent your early childhood roaming a recycling center in Durham, when somebody decided that you, emaciated and full of worms, were worth rescuing. St. Francis Animal Hospital fed and treated you, caged you during the week, and fostered you out on the weekends. Soon some couple adopted you—of course they did! You were a handsome little brindle with a dopey head tilt.

When the woman called to say her boyfriend left and she couldn’t take care of you on her own, St. Francis told her to bring you back and found you emaciated. And full of worms. You soon were back to your routine: weekdays in the kennel at St. F, occasional days at Sunny Acres paid for out-of-pocket by the rescue lady, and most weekends with your foster mom, who was training for an Iron Man triathlon and would bring you to Northgate Park Dog Park after her training runs. I don’t know—she probably could’ve taken you on most of those; your legs came from the greyhound side of your family, and you were fast and energetic, if your gait was a little goofy.

But I’m glad she didn’t because then I might not have met you. You and Violet were fast friends, and your foster mom opened the conversation with, “They play so well together.” I had to agree, and she added, “I’m his foster mom. Are you looking for another dog?” No. I wasn’t. Adopting Violet had been the best decision of my adult life, but TWO? The food, the poop, the vet bills, the noise. No thank you. Except yes thank you. Not that day. The next weekend, when we met again at the dog park, and yes thank you, every day after that when I couldn’t stop thinking about you. And yes thank you, when the rescue lady brought you over to my house for a try-out. Oh, well, you couldn’t eat that much, right? Right?

Oh.

And the vet bills wouldn’t be that much, right? Except the occasional trip to the emergency vet on a Sunday to get you stitched up, and the occasional trip to the regular vet two days later when you’d romped enough to rip the stitches out. Or when you chewed through your Elizabethan collar—I found it hanging like a clown’s tie around your neck—and pulled out your staples.

We had a great life, the three of us. We went up to Cuttyhunk, and you got to experience a freedom impossible on the busy mainland. You galumphed down the beaches, rustled the bayberry, almost killed that gimpy duck before I waded in in my socks and shoes and released him to his miserable life. I think all three of us might have been disappointed at the Darwinism interrupted. Trips up the mountain to Cove Creek meant romps on Swift’s Hill. Mmm, deer poop. Mostly we just hung out here in Hillsborough, where Occoneechee Mountain was a mile away.

My barometer of whether you’d gotten enough exercise: did you harass the cat in the evening? An hour’s hike every day (I’d do three miles, you and Violet probably nine), plus yard time and wrestling with Violet: you’d lift your giant pit bull head off the couch and your eyes would follow Maxwell as he slinked tauntingly through the living room. An hour-and-twenty-minute leash walk: you’d bolt off the couch and pin that poor 16-year-old cat every time. The dog park could sometimes satiate you too, though you had that troublesome habit of fixating on a dog, which to me was clearly a co-dependent sort of love, but to the dog’s owner looked like you were just holding it down by the neck. You loved hiking. Hiking was the best. You’d take off after squirrels and whatnot, but you knew who had the treats and, unlike your sister, who would run by my outstretched palm without a cursory glance if it meant another minute of freedom, you never took off for more than 10 minutes. It was probably that sense memory of being emaciated, and full of worms, that kept you close to a reliable source of hot dogs.

So yesterday, when neither of you came back, I started to worry. Four hours later, when I was achy from all the mileage, hoarse from calling your names, and parched from crying, Violet came bursting out of the woods and gobbled the Subway sandwich Laura had gotten for me. I was so relieved. I was sure you’d be right behind her. Instead, Animal Control showed up, with your bullet-riddled carcass in one of the hatches, with a report that you’d been trying to eat some guy’s chickens. Of course you were! It was 7:45, and you eat at 6:15 sharp.

Maybe I could have walked a little faster, shouted a little louder, and I would have found you in time. I suppose I could’ve kept you on the leash, like I was supposed to, but that would’ve made us both miserable.

Erik and I buried you in the yard, and I’m going to plant a garden on your grave, so I’ll have a place to go and remember you. Not that I need a place. You’re everywhere. You’re in my mangled left clog, which I left on the floor a little too long. That confused you. Chew toys were left on the floor. My fault. You’re in the food bowl, which you would sit before, trembling with anticipation at the bounty inside, and then snorf and lick clean at my signal. I can hear you, when I’d come home from work and you and Violet would wake up and do your yoga, your yawn a giant “Aaaaaaaaaah-oooooooooo.” I can feel your forelegs and big triangle-head draped on my thigh, pinning me to the couch. I can see you playing Smackdown with your sister, with your mean-face on but that traitorous tail wagging joyously behind you.

Violet doesn’t have your rarely-heard, big, houndy bark, “Whoa, whoa, whoa!” And she doesn’t smack her lips apart when going for a treat. And she doesn’t shit on command or in convenient locations like you did. She insists on having her belly rubbed, whereas you were content with any body-to-body contact. She’s not laid-back like you, doesn’t trust strangers, and is petrified of children, the smaller, the more frightening. She doesn’t sleep with her back legs straight up under her chin.

There are many great qualities that she has that you didn’t, of course, and many of them are written above. She sounds the alarm at strangers. She’s insistently affectionate. She doesn’t steal food off the counter. She sleeps in a little pit-bull ball. She’s smart and can sense danger. And most of all, she’s still here. Thank god she’s still here.

I’m going to miss you, Boonie. I loved you like crazy. I was already in a tailspin from breaking up with Jay and from the wrenchingly beautiful birth of Annabelle, the juxtaposition of pure elation with the concern of being nearly 34 and not having any prospect of having a baby of my own. I was circling the bowl when the universe flushed. And I’m drowning.

Much love,
Amy

I read this letter now, and it feels clunky. I want to change words, transpose phrases, omit and amend. But it was my truth on May 21, 2009, at three o’clock in the morning, so I’ll leave it be.

It’s the Wednesday of EOGs, Boonie. I hate this day.

Million Dollar Baby

Violet was such a rock star during her ACL surgery. Even though she came out all bruisey and swoll and pitiful, she was a total tough guy.

The surgery went well. They removed the torn ligament and implanted a metal plate into her knee with screws. No breezing through TSA checkpoints for my pit bull!

She came home, I doped her up as much as possible, and she seemed to be getting better.

And then she wasn’t.

Maybe it was when that neighbor dog was loose and jumped on her; maybe her brother knocked her ass-over-tin-cups while I wasn’t looking; maybe…I don’t know, could be anything.

When I took her in for her follow-up, the vet student took one look at her and said, “Yeah, she shouldn’t be limping at eight weeks.” Could be three things, they told me. Plate breakage: unlikely, because she would have been in a lot more pain. Torn meniscus (which would require more surgery): well, no telltale clicking, so probably not. Osteoarthritis: most likely, due to all that extry bone she grew trying to stabilize the joint. They sedated and manipulated and x-rayed her. The prescription: anti-inflammatory drugs and cross your fingers they work. If they do, then it’s osteoarthritis, and it’ll be chronic but she won’t need to get sliced n’ stitched again.

After a few weeks, she was still gimpy. I called one of the surgeons. “Do you hear a clicking?” she asked. No, thank goodness. “Just keep giving her the Rimadyl and call us back in a couple weeks.”

Last weekend, we went up to Boone to cheer for Wa as she ran a marathon. Saturday morning, I gave the dogs some breakfast, and we were out the door to hit—our very favorite—Swift’s Hill before heading over to the race course. As soon as we stepped out the door, Redford off the leash, Violet on,

kuh-POK,

kuh-POK,

kuh-POK.

That. Was Violet’s knee.

When I spoke to another surgeon on Monday, he said it was most likely a torn meniscus and that they had a cancellation on Tuesday. They could evaluate and, if need be, surgerize her on the same day.

Tuesday morning, the doc talked baby-talk to her as he pulled her leg back. Kuh-POK, it went. Surgery then.

This operation was less aggressive than the first, and because it happened within the recovery period, they would just charge me anesthesia and administrative fees. Surgical costs were waived. So it was only $1,200. Ha!

And I just got the pink slip at work. Which is not as bad as it sounds. The early allocation numbers are done based on last year’s enrollment, and my school is going to have way more students next year, so my principal is “very confident” I’ll still have a position. And of course, I was planning on leaving this job in a year anyway. But still. Timing.

Money, man. I know it’s fiction, but it feels like truth.

Thing is, I was talking to this dude after Violet’s first surgery and he said, “It’s great that you’re doing that for her.” I cocked my head. He continued, “A lot of people would just put her down.”

!!!!!

WTF?! No! That had never even occurred to me!

I guess he’s not the only one who thinks that way. My neighbor stopped by yesterday. He asked how much Violet’s surgery was and when I told him $4,700 so far, he said, “I’d put my kids down for that kind of money.” That was pretty funny.

 

 

 

A Shot of Tequila and a High Five

I remember, after seeing the movie Amélie for the first time, having a conversation with someone, probably my mom, about how we should re-watch it every Sunday night before we had to go back to work on Monday. I know exactly jack shit about cinematography so I’m not sure how Jean-Pierre Jeunet rendered the colors that bright and the soundtrack that poignant and the characters that sublimely flawed and the story that enthralling and delightful. All I know is I walked out of the theater all teary and smiley, repeating “Bredoteau! Bretodeau!” in a distinctly Le Pewian accent to myself, wanting to go out and live life! Do good deeds! Find love!

Last night, I decided to watch The Road.

So the opposite.

I mean: enthralling story, yes. But Jesus. I wanted to crawl into my bed and pull the covers over my head. Which I did. But before I did, I checked Facebook one more time and saw the news of Osama’s bin Laden’s death.

Some people were rejoicing (“Bin Laden is DEAD!!! Rot in hell you dirty piece of shit!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!”).  Some were sober (“No death is worth celebrating.”). Some questioned others’ Christianity (“Christians, we have been called to live a life that is pleasing to Jesus Christ. How does harboring so much hate glorify our Lord and Savior?”)

My first reaction was surprise—I never thought we’d get him—followed by relief, that this guy who orchestrated a movement that has killed thousands finally got his. And then I had a little Toby Keith moment, where I was like, “And at the hands of the Amurricans goddammit!” I shook that off but quickly realized this little operation would greatly increase Barack Obama’s chances of getting re-elected in 2012. So I posted something like: “Ten years. Obama ftw! Seriously, men and women of the U.S. Military and Commander-in-Chief Obama, I’m awed.”

Of course, what followed was quotes from MLK Jr.: “Returning hate for hate multiplies hate, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars. Darkness cannot drive out darkness: only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate: only love can do that.”

And videos from Ground Zero and DC, where people were straight up celebrating, and it reminded me of the footage from Muslim countries around the world, of crowds rejoicing as the Twin Towers collapsed. And I thought, “What are we doing?! We’re doing the same thing we found reprehensible!”

The horror of The Road, combined with the ambivalent feelings I had about the assassination, made for some pretty extraordinary bruxercising for me. I woke up this morning and felt like someone had punched me in the ear infection. That’s right. Like I had had an ear infection and then someone punched me in it. I ground my teeth so hard that my jaw’s still all tender on the left side.

I was grumpy all day. One of my students was doing everything in her power to be my Buddha, and my uterus started causing me my monthly strife. I ate too much. Carbopalooza. I got home to find Violet’s limp not any better than it was yesterday. The WOD kicked my ass. And not one of you, MY SO-CALLED FRIENDS, had told me that my nostril hair had gotten completely out of control.

Downtrodden.

But then my friend (the one I quoted at the beginning of this post) updated her status to: ok, y’all: i get and agree that the death of any human, yes even osama bin laden, is not to be taken lightly, and that his death marks the beginning of yet another period of uncertainty, but before we get all “spiritual” and “now, now kids…”, i think we as americans, and for fuck’s sake definitely our troops, deserve a shot of tequila and a high five. we can go back to being “the better person” tomorrow…

It wasn’t Amélie, but it sure made me feel better.