Showing posts with label Charlie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charlie. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Ode to a Blackberry

This morning, I lost a dear friend


Goodbye Francis. Yes, my blackberry had a name.  I am strange that way.  I name inanimate objects.  I am positive there is page with my name on it in the DSM IV.  


Francis was mortally wounded in an unprovoked attack.  The injuries, incompatible with life,  left her lingering in a semi conscious state, barely clinging to this world.  She is hanging on, refusing to let go.  Occasionally she will emit a pathetic chirp, the occasional ring.  I will gently cradle her broken body in my hand, press her to my ear & share my grief with friends.  At times it is too much for her, and she drops into a comatose state. 

It is with great sadness I contacted my wireless carrier and ordered a replacement.  Thankfully our insurance plan covers her replacement.  But nothing will replace her in my heart. 

Who was responsible for this massacre?  


This morning Bea snatched poor defenseless Francis from the table and chewed the very life out of her in the blink of an eye.   I was too late to save her when I heard the ominous crack.  It is my fault, I should not have left Francis in a vulnerable position.   I cannot blame the puppy and must let Francis move onto her next life with forgiveness in my heart.  

In honor of her passing I will share with you some of the terrible pictures I snapped over the last several years.  It is my way of letting her go...and reliving the memories she captured for me.  Thankfully she lived long enough this morning for me to mail these to myself.  Sadly, my address book did not make it and will need to be recreated...


My dear sweet Katie who passed in Nov 2008, with Bonnie as a puppy and Ranger.


I miss this dog every day of my life.  


Charlie, the cat who thought he was a dog, who passed just last year.  



I miss this cat every day of my life.


My 19 y/o son, who moved out and is living on his own.  I do not miss him, the laundry, dirty towels, smelly shoes or loud music blaring from his room.   



My 17 y/o son, Zach.  AKA "Stink Eye". 



Our grand daughter Alyssa a few minutes after she was born. 



The next shot is from when Bonnie was still a fat puppy and Beth liked her.  Three dogs on a bed.  Notice the dog crates in the background?  Yes, my dogs sleep in the same room with us.  Pathetic eh?



Four dogs on a bed, shot a year later.  Much older Bonnie with Brynn added to the mix. 



Brynn, two days after I adopted her and  had to take her to the vet to be treated for Parvo.  This was snapped the morning she was admitted into the vet hospital, it shows how very sick she was.  A little puppy sound asleep in a blanket on the table in the exam room.  She didn't wake up for the vet to examine her.  



Looking at this breaks my heart to this day.



Bea, a much happier puppy the day I brought her home from Idaho.  She is in her crate in the passenger seat of my car.  Still so tiny and unsure.  



She screamed her head off in that crate for several nights. 



Brynn and Bonnie sleeping snuggled on the bed the day after we brought Brynn home from training at Dianne's in Idaho.  They missed each other.  



Brynn last week when we took my 17 year old son to the emergency room with a broken nose.  She is wearing her service dog vest & is watching my son on the stretcher next to her.   



Here she is resting quietly next to my chair as the nurse and doctor reset his nose.


That reminds me, I never have shared with you that Brynn is also my service dog have I?   One day I will tell you about what she does for me and why.  Until then it is still a deeply personal subject and I am not quite ready to spill the beans on the internet.  Although I kinda just did - guess that is my way of working up to it.  

I may even tell you about this....meet the contents of Bea's stomach.  Removed courtesy of the vet a mere 30 minutes after ingestion.  Can you guess what that is? 


Puppies and kids.  They will make you cry or make you smile - on any given day.   You gotta love em, or you would beat them to death. 

Friday, February 20, 2009

Crossing the Bridge

Charlie crossed the bridge this evening in our arms, he slipped peacefully away. We are all going to miss him tremendously.

Goodbye Charlie









How do you know?


Charlie is not doing well.

Something changed in him last night. Perhaps he is beginning his journey over the bridge on his own?

How do you know when it is time to end their fight for them? Maybe I should just let him go peacefully at home. Am I being selfish? How am I the one to judge that it is time for him to go?

We have an appointment with the vet this evening - this is the second one I have made in a week. The first I cancelled.

My heart is breaking...

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Charlie & Ranger

This is Charlie O'Chicken the Third, our 18 y/o cat.



We adopted Charlie 16 years ago after finding him at a garage sale for free. He was stuffed in a cat carrier with his litter box, food and toys in a heap next to him.



He was a very tubby kitty when we brought him home. He was a big boy - 21 lbs. He loved his food.



Charlie is the most social cat I have ever met. He never has been one to hide when people come over. He is right there in the middle of the mix, hanging out and meowing at everyone to pet him. Someone told us a while back that Charlie was a dog masquerading as a cat. Purrfect description



Charlie has cancer - gastrointestinal leiomyosarcoma. A cancerous tumor growing on his intestine. When the vet diagnosed him months ago he said that Charlie didn't have long to live, maybe 3-4 weeks. That was 8 months ago. We have watched him slowly deteriorate, and it has been heart breaking. My once thick & sturdy cat is now emaciated and weak. Through it all he has maintained his normal sweet attitude & continued to be social.

Two weeks ago I thought it was time - he became incontinent, listless, and tipping over when he was walking. I talked to the kids and prepared them and planned on taking Charlie to the vet the next day if he got any worse.

The next morning Charlie was sitting at his food bowl howling at me to feed him. He looked better. Since then he has been gaining weight. But the mass in his tummy has been growing harder and larger. He is still a bit tippy when he walks, and he does occasionally leave a puddle or two behind but he is doing much better. Given this sudden change I can't help but wonder - is this the improvement before the decline? Every day I wonder...is this the day? How do you determine what "quality of life" is? He wants to eat (constantly) and drinks. He still wants to sit on your lap and be snuggled and he still hangs out with the dogs.



Ranger knows there is something wrong ...





If Charlie lays on the 'dog' bed - Ranger lays down next to him ever so gently. Charlie purrs so loudly you can hear it across the room.




Tuesday, January 27, 2009

One of These Things....

One of these things is not like the others

One of these things just doesn't belong




Can you tell which thing is not like the others

By the time I finish my song?




Did you guess which thing was not like the others?

Did you guess which thing just doesn't belong?




If you guessed this one is not like the others,

Then you're absolutely...right!



You're So SMART!


This journey back into our collective Sesame Street Memories was brought to you by Charlie O'Chicken the Third. Our wonderful 18 y/o Maine Coon cat.

Charlie is a dog masquerading as a cat.