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How Do You Know
When It's Time? |
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I don't subscribe to the idea that dogs "will let us know when
it's time," at least not in any conscious sense on their part. For one thing,
I've found in my years of counseling folks who have ill pets and often
accompanying them through the euthanasia process, that this notion is often
interpreted in a way that puts a lot of pressure on people when they're
already stressed and grief-stricken. "What if I miss the signs? He looked
miserable yesterday but not today. What if I act too soon or not soon enough?
How could he ever let on that he wants it to end? But maybe I'm deluding
myself that he feels better than he does."
Dogs are not people. We lovingly anthropomorphize our dogs
during our time together and there's no harm in that, even quite a bit of
reward for both them and us. But the bottom line is that they are not people
and they don't think in the way people think. (Many of us would argue that
that speaks to the superiority of dogs.) These amazing beings love us and
trust us implicitly. It just isn't part of their awareness that they should
need to telegraph anything to us in order for their needs to be met or their
well-being ensured. They are quite sure that we, as their pack leaders,
operate only in their best interest at all times. Emotional selfishness is not
a concept in dogdom and they don't know how hard we sometimes have to fight
against it ourselves.
Dogs also have no mindset for emotional surrender or giving up.
They have no awareness of the inevitability of death as we do and they have no
fear of it. It is fear that so often influences and aggravates our perceptions
when we are sick or dying and it becomes impossible to separate the fear out
from the actual illness after a while. But that's not the case with dogs.
Whatever we observe to be wrong with our sick dogs, it's all illness. And we
don't even see the full impact of that until it's at a very advanced point,
because it's a dog's nature to endure and to sustain the norm at all costs. If
that includes pain, then that's the way it is. Unlike us, they have never
learned that letting pain show, or reporting on it, may generate relief or
aid. So they endure, assuming in their deepest doggy subconscious that
whatever we abide for them is what is to be abided.
If there is a "look in the eye", or an indication of giving up,
that we think we see from our beloved dogs, it isn't a conscious attitude on
their part or a decision to communicate something to us. It's just an
indication of how tired and depleted they are. But they don't know there's any
option other than struggling on, so that's what they do. We must assume that
the discomfort we see is much less than the discomfort they really feel. And
we do know of other options and it is entirely our obligation to always offer
them the best option for that moment, be it further intervention, or none, or
the gift of rest.
From the moment we embrace these animals when they first grace our lives, every day is one day closer to the day they must abandon their very temporary and faulty bodies and return to the state of total perfection and rapture they have always deserved. We march along one day at a time, watching and weighing and continuing to embrace and respect each stage as it comes. Today is a good day. Perhaps tomorrow will be, too, and perhaps next week and the weeks or months after. But there will eventually be a winding down. And we must not let that part of the cycle become our enemy.
When I am faced with the ultimate decision about how I can best
serve the animal I love so much, I try to set aside all the complications and
rationales of what I may or may not understand medically and I try to clear my
mind of any of the confusions and ups and downs that are so much a part of
caring for a terminally ill pet. This is hard to do, because for months and
often years we have been in this mode of weighing hard data, labs, food, how
many ounces did he drink, should he have his rabies shot or not, etc. But at
some point it's time to put all of that in the academic folder and open the
spiritual folder instead. At that point we are wise to ask ourselves the
question: "Does he want to be here today, to experience this day in this way,
as much as I want him to?"
Remember, dogs are not afraid, they are not carrying anxiety
and fear of the unknown. So for them it's only about whether this day holds
enough companionship and ease and routine so that they would choose to have
those things more than anything else and that they are able to focus on those
things beyond any discomfort or pain or frustration they may feel. How great
is his burden of illness this day, and does he want/need to live through this
day with this burden of illness as much as I want/need him to? If I honestly
believe that his condition is such, his pleasures sufficient, that he would
choose to persevere, then that's the answer and we press on.
If, on the other hand, I can look honestly and bravely at the
situation and admit that he, with none of the fear or sadness that cripples
me, would choose instead to rest, then my obligation is clear. Because
he needs to know in his giant heart, beyond any doubt, that I will have the
courage to make the hard decisions on his behalf, that I will always put his
peace before my own, and that I am able to love him as unselfishly as he has
loved me.
After many years, and so very many loved ones now living on
joyously in their forever home in my heart, this is the view I take. As my
veterinarian, who is a good and loving friend, injects my precious one with
that freedom elixir, I always place my hand on top of his hand that holds the
syringe. He has chosen a life of healing animals and I know how terribly hard
it is for him to give up on one. So I want to shoulder that burden with him so
he's not alone. The law of my state says the veterinarian is the one licensed
to administer the shot, not me. But a much higher law says this is my ultimate
gift to my dog and the responsibility that I undertook on the day I welcomed
that dog into my life forever.
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