Thank You
So many of you have sent me emails, cards, phone calls, and
even blog tributes for Murray that I felt I needed to share what his short life
meant to me.
Everywhere I look I see little reminders of Murray. Tiny paw
prints where he sprinted back into the house after our walks. The foot rest I keep
under my desk where he would look up at me with his sparkling chocolate eyes. The
way he’d watch the chickens dutifully, as if he knew someday they’d be his to
command. But most of all I remember the little kisses he gave me whenever I
picked him up.
He got sick, but he recovered despite the odds. Then he got
sick again. But we beat that too. We
were so close, so very close to making it. Then came the sucker punch from
which neither of us could recover.
I was up and at his side every time he whimpered in his
sleep or repositioned himself noisily in his crate. At night I’d rock him to
sleep and press him close to my body to keep him warm and safe.
I did everything humanly possible to keep him alive. When
the vet gave me such rotten odds against beating Parvo I insisted I could do a
better job than his skeleton staff during Christmas week. When he said Murray wouldn’t
survive kennel cough, I got his lungs clear and got him eating again.
But I couldn’t fight the distemper. Even if he survived, he’d
almost certainly suffer irreparable neurological damage. I’ve seen more than my
share of death. But sometimes death is preferable to suffering.
I did not rest for the whole time Murray was sick. Not one
day. Not one hour. Where I found the strength I don’t know. But I know I did it
for him.
He was my baby.
I can’t help thinking I let him down. That maybe if I was
smarter, more intuitive, or attacked the sickness more aggressively then maybe
things would’ve been different. My logical side says I did all I could. But my
heart wants to blame something. It wants to make some sense of this loss.
I’ve never in my life asked anyone to take care of me. But I
need someone to take care of me now. I
have no strength left.
My boys are finally home. But my baby is still gone.
***
Words cannot express how much your letters and calls meant
to me. I never knew I had so many friends. Thank you.
I need a few more days. I’ll try to be back soon.
Comments
((((hugs)))
{{{{hugs}}}}
Hugs, hugs, and more hugs.
Hugs,
Susan
We've all had the honor of journeying with you as you took this darling puppy into your home, learned of his ills and nursed him with loving care each and everyday. Not a day passed that Murray had to wonder about your affection for him. You showed him in every way you could. Honestly, you probably gave him the one thing the vet and his staff couldn't, and that's true love.
His days with you were not long, but they were filled with so much love. You gave him the greatest gift ever. Through his kisses, he gave it back.
I'm so sorry for your loss. Grieve as you should. Mend in your own time. I know I don't speak just for me when I say we're not going anywhere.
Mason
Thoughts in Progress
I know you are still so very sad and so very much in pain, not sure how long Greg can stay but let him take care of you if only for a few days because honey you deserve some TLC in a big way right now and for a long time to come from past experience.
Most people do not get that a pet really is our "child" when they are puppies especially, but it really is that kind of relationship because just like a human baby they are totally dependent on us for everything.
Take care, get some much needed rest and know that the care and comfort and love you bestowed upon that one little dog in a short amount of time is more than most people ever give a pet that they have for it's entire life span of years and years.
You did not fail Murray, you did not fail yourself either but did over and above what anyone else could have it just worked out that little Murray's luck just would not hold and he is now gone from earth but will never lose his place in your memories and in your heart!
Hugs to you, wish so much could hug you in person as know this is a blow you just did not need to start off the year with.
We will be waiting when you heal enough to share anything with us in the future Maria, take your time!
All my best always and you take care,
Jackie
I truly believe that sometimes some people and animals are in our lives for such a brief time to teach us something. It usually takes us a long time to figure out what we were meant to learn.
You did the best you could for him. No one could've done better.
I'm sure this will make you cry, but it's my favorite poem and i share it whenever a friend loses someone, most often a dog:
I am standing on the seashore-
A ship spreads her white sails in the morning breeze and starts for the blue ocean-
She is an object of beauty and I stand and watch her until at length she hangs like a speck of white cloud just where the sea and sky meet to mingle with each other-
Then someone at my side says, "There! She's Gone!"
Gone where? Gone from my sight that's all. She is just as large in mast and hull and spar as she was when she left my sight, and just as able to bear her load of living freight to the place of her destination-
Her diminished size is in me-
not her-
And just at that moment when someone at my side says, "There! She's Gone!" there are other eyes watching her coming, and other voices take up the glad shout, "There she comes!"
And that is dying.
((hugs))
Take it easy. {[hugs}}