Samson’s Merry Magic – aka Circus Dog, aka Little Miss
Magic, aka Dammit Magic!, aka Magic Stop!, aka Magic No!, aka Magic Don’t!, aka
My Girlie Girl, most commonly known as Magic. 11/27/01 – 09/24/15
Magic has had numerous medical difficulties, starting in July 2010 when I rushed her at night to Bright Eyes, Bushy Tails in Iowa City. She having trouble breathing, shaking, clearly in discomfort. She was there for four days, they having discovered that she was suffering both from Lyme Disease and a completely non-functioning thyroid.
Approximately 14 months later, she collapsed while in the front yard. By then I was taking her to Farm and Family Vet in Victor. Dr. Cheney - a great, great vet - recognized that she had the symptoms of Addison's Disease, a disease vets so rarely catch that they call it the Great Imposter due to it presenting as several different diseases. There is only one treatment, and she started on it as soon as tests confirmed that's what she had. For the last several years, I've spent about $140 a month on meds, an amount I'd gladly spend forever. Unfortunately, time had other plans.
Magic has had numerous medical difficulties, starting in July 2010 when I rushed her at night to Bright Eyes, Bushy Tails in Iowa City. She having trouble breathing, shaking, clearly in discomfort. She was there for four days, they having discovered that she was suffering both from Lyme Disease and a completely non-functioning thyroid.
Approximately 14 months later, she collapsed while in the front yard. By then I was taking her to Farm and Family Vet in Victor. Dr. Cheney - a great, great vet - recognized that she had the symptoms of Addison's Disease, a disease vets so rarely catch that they call it the Great Imposter due to it presenting as several different diseases. There is only one treatment, and she started on it as soon as tests confirmed that's what she had. For the last several years, I've spent about $140 a month on meds, an amount I'd gladly spend forever. Unfortunately, time had other plans.
Magic had a small stroke the night we had off before we
opened Death of a Salesman at ICM. She had a major stroke the week after the
show closed.
The stroke really affected her balance and her sense of
direction. It didn’t help that she was already nearly blind. Dr.
Cheney said that if she didn’t begin to recover within
the first two weeks of the stroke, she wouldn’t recover at all. I spent the end of May and the first part of
June thinking any day would be the day I would have to make the decision to
have her put to sleep. But she gradually recovered a lot of her abilities. Not
all. She couldn’t climb the steps to the bed anymore, meaning I have had to
lift her onto the bed. She also never was able to walk in a straight line,
meaning no more running free outside. She seemed to like being on the leash
after that, though. I imagine it made her feel safer, knowing someone was there
near her.
I worried that she wouldn’t make it through the summer, that
I would need to say goodbye while Ethan was still here. But she made it
through, and was still doing okay til a couple of weeks ago. That’s when I
noticed her ability to walk at all was deteriorating. Shortly after that she
began having trouble standing, and most recently trouble breathing at times.
English Springer Spaniels always look sad. That’s their
thing. But there’s a light in their eyes, a spark behind the sadness. This past
weekend I realized the spark had gone. She seemed tired, weary. I had silently
promised her that when she was ready to go, I would do the right thing and not
hold on to her for my sake. So today I called the vet, and made the
arrangements. He’s going to come here on Thursday, and that will be it.
I’m writing this with a broken heart. She has been my
constant companion since Lesa and I got her in January 2002. I have spent more
time with her over these 13+ years that I have with any other living creature,
even Gunner (who was with Lesa in Pennsylvania for about half a year). Magic
fit in a baseball cap when we first got her, and now, as I tease her when I
have to lift her upstairs on onto the bed, she’s a ‘heavy heavy dog’. I love
her.
I cannot overstate how much she, and Gunner, have meant to
me. I went through some very dark times when Lesa took the boys out east. There
was a good three year period where I felt so meaningless, so insubstantial that
a breeze could have carried me away. Many was the night on the way home,
especially after Ethan had just left here to go back to Pennsylvania, where I
was tempted to just keep driving until the money ran out and just start over
someplace else, with no contact with anyone I knew. Magic, and Gunner, stopped
me from doing that. They were my anchor, my tether to this life, my sanity. I
don’t need them for that anymore, fortunately, but that doesn’t make the pain
any less acute.
She’s laying on the floor right now beside me, licking my
feet as she likes to do. Of course this has been one of the rare recent days
where she seems engaged with life. But that doesn’t change the fact that no
matter what I do, she’s not long for this world, and I’d rather let her go out
on good days, with dignity, then prolong it. I owe her that.
I can only hope she’s enjoyed her life, that she knows how
loved she has been and will always be. She will always be a part of me.
1 comment:
How Do You Measure Grief? http://cas-randomramblings.blogspot.com/2012/12/how-do-you-measure-grief.html
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