Sunday, August 28, 2011

All Dogs Go To Heaven

This weekend
I could have expected lots of things.
Like maybe a post about my sweet baby AndrewAnd how he is growing and changing.
Or maybe a post about our trip to Great Wolf Lodge,
an indoor/outdoor waterpark in Dallas

and how darling Andy was in his frog suit
and how I couldn't get a decent picture of TJ
because he wouldn't get out of the pool and stop moving
for long enough for the flash to go off

But life gets pretty unexpected
I never expected to be posting about a dog.

Chasqui
July 5, 2004- August 27, 2011
We adopted Chasqui from MSGAO in August of 2007
and he's just BEEN there ever since
I'm so used to him, I don't even think about it.
A hip-height shadow
that follows me through my day
room to room:
Lays by me while I fold the laundry
Joins us on the floor of TJ's room every night for prayer

The house is strange to me without the sound of dog tags

TJ has loved him from day one
I think he liked having another creature at his eye level
they've spent thousands of hours this close together
foreground or background
he's just been there
the family dog
I Google'd "dog poems"
they were all cheesy and terrible
and Chasqui may have been a doofus,
but never cheesy or stupid.
Nothing really expressed how I felt.
So I gave it up.

Robert Frost's "Fire and Ice" kept coming to mind:

Some say the world will end in fire,
Some say in ice.
From what I've tasted of desire
I hold with those who favor fire.
But if it had to perish twice,
I think I know enough of hate
To say that for destruction ice
Is also great
And would suffice.

Not that it has anything to do with dogs.
It doesn't.
But it does have to do with passion.
So maybe that's why.

I think we always knew we'd lose Chasqui in some bizarre accident
I just always thought it would involve food
after all the near misses:
the stolen turkey
the two batches of chocolate cookies
and the ever famous Christmas rolls
(yes, you may laugh)

The bizarre accident was all heat and running.
So I guess what killed him was doing what he loved,
even if it's not how he died.
I'm not sure what to tell TJ when he says,
"Chasqui, again?"

or, "Mommy, get a NEW Chasqui?"

"Chasqui" was what the King's messengers were called
on the Inca Trail.
They were elite sprinters.
We always thought it fitting.

If I have a regret it's that we didn't get to tell him "goodbye"
Kristen, I'm so grateful you sat with him.
No dog should leave alone.

Run swift, buddy
You were a good dog
and will be missed

8 comments:

Christina Martinez said...

I'm so sorry! What a loss. Hang in there friend!

Katie said...

Oh my goodness I am So sorry!

kristin said...

and he was such a good dog, even when he ate the bacon greased soaked paper towels at Lake Sylvia. so sorry for you loss...

Mel Glade said...

Kristin, the bacon towels and subsequent bowel distress remains one of the funnier stories.

Nancy said...

What a lovely animal and a lovely place to think of him waiting for the rest of the family in Heaven

Megan said...

I am so sorry!! :( Aunt Ronalee/Mom told me last night. My heart breaks for you and your family. He was a beautiful dog. I am going to give TJ an extra belly rub tonight.

Kathryn said...

You DID love that dog, even if you didn't know it all the time. You've always been a good writer. This even got me to tear up a bit.

Rachelle said...

I am so sorry! That is terrible.