Category Archives: Harry

Middle

I read a memoir a while back called The Middle Place by Kelly Corrigan.  It’s about a mother of two young daughters who discovers she has breast cancer around the same time her father discovers he has bladder cancer.  It’s about her experience of being both a parent and a child during a medical crisis.  It’s about being in the middle place.

Something happened this week that made me think of this book (excellent, by the way), and it’s probably not what you think.  First, I don’t have breast cancer…or thyroid cancer (not yet, anyway).  Second, my parents are healthy.  They’re doing quite well, actually.  Mike’s parents are fine, too.  What made me think about the book was Harry.

The real Harry is on the left.

The real Harry is on the left.

Tuesday night was a long, rough night.  At about 12:30am, Harry popped out of bed and couldn’t sit still.  For hours, he moved from one spot to another from room to room over and over again grimacing in discomfort.  Something was very wrong.  We rushed him to the vet at 7:30 the next morning only to discover from an x-ray of his stomach and back that he had a degenerated disc and possibly a pinched nerve in his Thoracic, or middle, spine.

Editor’s note:  The x-ray also showed that Harry had a lot of poop in his belly.  According to the vet, the back pain was most likely making it hard for him to do his business.  In an effort to keep things light, the vet said to me with a snicker, “Your dog is full of shit.”  Given the circumstances, he took a sizable risk with this zinger, but he was lucky.  If anyone can handle and appreciate a good poop joke, it’s me.

The disc degeneration is age (and gravity) related and there’s nothing we can do except treat the current inflammation with a non-steroid anti-inflammatory medication and Valium (lucky duck dog!), let him rest, and keep an eye on him.

Not a problem.  I can’t take my eyes off of him!  The love, gratitude, and sympathy I feel for this dog is, quite frankly, more than I can handle.  Somehow my puppy has turned eight, and while he’ll always feel like my baby, he’s transforming into something akin to an aging parent.  I’m smack in the middle of his life cycle, and I feel dizzy.

If it seems like I’m obsessed with death and aging – and I might be – it’s not all my fault.  It’s not just that Dylan no longer wears clothing in sizes that end in “T” or that Riley now sleeps on the top bunk.   Did you see New Kids On The Block on “The Today Show” earlier this week?  They looked, well, old.  (By the way, 98 Degrees was on the show yesterday and they seem to be fairing much better.)  Do you know old Brad Pitt is?  Forty-nine.  Forty-nine.   Wasn’t he just in “Thelma and Louise”?  Oh wait, that was twenty-two years ago!

My mother has never liked her birthday. For years I didn’t understand her birthday malaise.  Now I do.   Then, I was young.  Now, I’m a couple of seasons of “The Voice” away from forty, and my puppy has an ailment that starts with the word “degenerative.”

What’s a girl Runaway Mama to do?  I could pilfer some of Harry’s Valium (I would never), but instead I’m going to do everything I can to ensure that he ages with grace and dignity, and I’m going to take him on a long walk, in the middle of which I hope he has a big, glorious (and graceful and dignified) poop.

Do you have pets? 

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Filed under Harry, health, pets, Uncategorized

A Letter To My Dog

Dear Harry,

Happy eighth birthday! In dog years, that makes you forty-five and my wise elder, which suggests that perhaps you should be writing a letter to me. Since you have no opposable thumbs, though, I’ll continue.

harrybday1

It has recently come to my attention that you won’t be here forever. The gray hairs sprouting above your eyes are one clue, but it’s something Riley said a few weeks ago that really got me thinking (and, of course, worrying) about it. He said, “Mommy, when I grow up I will take care of Harry.”

This touching declaration of love and friendship (from an almost four-year-old) made me a very Proud Mama. It also made me cry on and off for the rest of the day because, my Harry-Barry/Bo-Berry/H-to-the-Berry, you won’t be here when Riley is grown up.

I simply want to thank you being in my life.

I’ll never forget how little you were when we first met you.

harrypuppy

For weeks, I feared I would sit on you or roll over on top of you in my sleep (because even though I didn’t want you to sleep in my bed, you weren’t going to have it any other way.)

I’ll always cherish how you instantly loved Dylan when he came into our lives and how you treated him just like a little brother, sibling rivalry and all!

TummyTimeWithHarry

I remember when you slept with your head on my belly when you knew I was pregnant with Riley (before I did), and I’m grateful for the grace with which you welcomed him into our home when you knew full well that it meant you’d receive even less attention (if that was possible).

harrybabyseat

You let me embarrass you.

harrytie

This is from a Father’s Day card photo shoot (from before we had human children and we had nothing better to do than put a neck tie on our dog and force him to pose for pictures).

You let me dress you in a bee costume for Halloween.

Harry the Bee

Year after year after year.

Harry the Bee

Harry the Bee

You even let me put you in an argyle sweater (dry clean only!) once in a while.

harryargyle

(It was cold.)

To say you prepared me for motherhood is an understatement.

You taught me responsibility. After about a week of being your Mama, I secretly wished I could give you back. (Sorry.) Taking care of you was so much harder than I imagined! If it makes you feel any better, now you’re the easy one.

You taught me that love is in the details. Do you know that I can make you fall asleep just by rubbing your front legs?

You taught me fine art of guilt and blame. Shortly after your arrival, I accidentally dropped you headfirst on the concrete of our front walkway. I cried for a week straight.

You also taught me forgiveness. After that terrifying fall, you came back into my arms.

You taught me how to handle a crisis panic. Like the time you had a bone lodged in your throat blocking your breathing and I had to race you to the vet (through two school zones!) to have it removed. Or the time when you ate a rib bone and an x-ray revealed that you had dozens of bone shards traveling through your digestive tract. Or the time when you vomited from anesthesia (when you were neutered) (sorry) and – surprise! – dozens of unchewed, whole Greenies came flying out of your mouth. If it’s true that every family has an “emergency room” kid, you are definitely mine.

The apple certainly doesn’t fall far from the tree. Like me, your skin is sensitive and you suffer from anxiety. And like your brothers, you occasionally torture me with your picky eating (what kind of dog turns down ground beef?) and persnickety personality. Like yesterday when I presented you with your birthday present – a soft, cozy new bed handpicked especially for you – and you weren’t all that impressed.

harrybed3

If you could talk, you would’ve said (just like your brothers), “What else did you get me?”

harrybed2

Still not diggin’ it.

harrybed1

This was just to spite me, right?

Eventually, you embraced it.

harrybed

I think you love it, actually, but I respect your stubbornness. (You get that from me, too.) And at the end of the night, I’m glad you decided to cuddle with Mike and me in our bed, which is exactly where you belong.

Happy Birthday, Harry. Wishing you many, many more!

harrybday

Love,

Your Mama

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Filed under birthday, Harry, motherhood, Proud Mama