Elegy for Athena Dying
Part 1—A
Teaching
“The dead
don’t leave us, we shut them out.”
I can’t
remember where I read that,
but it comes
back to me now as you lie dying.
You’re always
by me these days.
If I change
rooms, you do, too.
Otherwise,
you only get up for dinner
or to relieve
yourself outside.
You still wag
your stump of a tail
whenever we
come in the door,
still meet
our gaze with soulful eyes.
I believe
you’re content,
and I can’t
fail to recognize
that your
simple acceptance of your situation
is a
teaching, a dharma for us all.
You’ve always
been our Wise Athena,
the truest
companion we’ve ever known.
One night, a
bit in my cups
as I watched
over your reclining form,
we connected,
and you shared with me
as much as I
could bear to learn—
speaking mind
to mind, of course,
as you
animals prefer—
about the
canine-human bond
we’ve always
had since the dawn of time.
You said we
humans are complex beings,
part of the
Earth, part of the Sky,
and without a
dog to keep us grounded
our roots in
the natural world would die.
We’d forget
we’re meant to live on the Earth
and
carelessly destroy the creation,
too clever by
far but not loving enough,
without a
dog’s intervention.
But only
those who deserve dogs will get them.
And you said
you embodied every dog
we’d ever had
over all the years,
each teaching
the lesson in different ways,
according to
breed and our need to heal,
but never
judging, always loyal,
faithful to
the human pack,
and always,
like any responsible dog,
just enough
of a nag and a pain
to make human
beings take you outside,
which many of
us wouldn’t often do
without a dog
as our guide.
And in return
for food and shelter,
and even more
so with deep love,
you teach in
the span of a dozen years
(which to a
dog is roughly a lifetime)
that we, too,
like you, are helplessly mortal—
one day a
puppy, a grown dog the next,
then aging,
then old, and finally at rest,
you break our
hearts as you dramatize
how to live,
how to die in life’s natural flow;
and though
your cycle will end with our tears,
all the way
through you live without question,
cooperating
even with the slow pace of death,
accepting
what happens until the last breath,
with a
dignity none of us ever forgets.
That’s what
dogs live for, you said,
lying by my
chair that night
after your
first breathing attack.
You told me
other things as well,
but I didn’t
understand them yet.
I was just
glad you lay on the carpet,
snorting and
farting and licking in dreams.
And though we
dreaded what tomorrow could bring,
you were still
there that night
and we still
were your kin.
Part 2—A
Conversation
After our
previous philosophical discussion
you
stabilized at a lower level of function
which lasted
for a day or two
until you
finally stopped eating.
Your mistress
and I took turns as your nurses,
silently
witnessing what we both knew.
Your compass
pointed due West, toward Death,
and our job
was to help see you through.
Off and on
throughout that last day
I’d watch you
struggle to catch your breath,
and I’d kneel
by your side, massaging your back,
stroking your
stout barrel of a chest,
and burst
into spontaneous spasms of weeping
as I tried to
ease your soul’s labor of birth—
free from
mortality’s tyrannical curse,
cut loose
from the tentacles of stubborn flesh.
“What can I
do to help you?” I cried,
the words
like a wail in my mind.
“Just keep
doing what you’re doing,” you replied.
“I’m okay,
it’s just taking some time.”
And lifting
your massive old head from the floor,
surveying me
with passive, droll eyes,
you licked my
face between my nose and my chin,
thanking me
over and over again
for taking
you in, and now helping you die.
“But you
needn’t drop to my side,” you said,
“every time I
need your help.
It’s better
if you use concentration
to imagine
yourself sharing my burden.
What matters
most is your intention.”
“You mean you
can feel my intention too?
Are you that
good at reading my mind?”
“I know your
every thought,” you said.
“We all do
but don’t pay much attention.
Why ruin a
good day? Our lives are too short,
and your
thoughts move too fast for reflection.”
You were
quiet then for a little while.
I went back
to my chair,
and soon
followed you into your trance—
breathing as
one in a cyclical pattern
of slowly
more slowly until all breath would stop,
and a moment
or two of silence would pass.
I’d wonder if
you’d breathed your last.
But no, you’d
start the cycle again,
draw a
shallow next breath—
no more than
you’d need to forestall your death.
“Why do you
stay? Can’t you let go?”
I cried out
as your weakness increased.
“She needs a
little more time,” you said,
tilting your
head toward your Mistress.
“I love you,”
I cried, as your stoical eyes
returned my
gaze with affection.
“I know. You
both do, and I love you too.
But not all
humans are as sincere as you.
The human
being is the only creature alive
who can say
‘I love you’ and not mean it.”
As my vigil
with you seemed nearing a close,
I reflected
on what I was learning,
and without a
doubt it all came back
to a
revelation I once had on acid.
“All people
are animals, all animals people!”
That was my
clarion cry.
Now forty
years later I’m of the same mind,
after my
talks with Athena, the Wise.
Part 3—A
Silence
The Sunset
beamed in through half-drawn curtains
as I watched
you from my rocking chair.
You lay on
the carpet just a few feet away—
glassy-eyed,
your head too heavy to raise,
your labored
breath irregular, short,
and I saw you
were seriously trying to die,
to finish
what we both knew must be,
but you just
couldn’t break yourself free.
Your mighty
heart wouldn’t stop beating,
though your
spirit was nearly gone,
and you had
no more patience for your body weight.
You
desperately dreamed of running free,
of enjoying a
tasty dinner again,
of licking
the faces of your best friends.
But none of
that could happen now,
It was
senseless for you to hang on any more.
We both knew
it, we both agreed:
the time had
come to make the call.
It was
Saturday before Memorial Day,
an
inconvenient time for crisis,
but we’d
heard of a vet whose specialty
is
“end-of-life care,” as he delicately puts it,
and he’ll
come to your house whenever he’s needed,
in the middle
of the night or a holiday weekend,
to end the
anxiety and physical pain.
(There’s not
much he can do for the grief.)
He came when
I called within an hour and a half
after he’d
rearranged his plans with his kids,
and we went
through the medical formalities—
t
he papers to
sign, what we could expect,
as he kneeled
down to make you his friend.
But you knew
who he was and why he had come,
as you
placidly looked into his eyes
when he
gently lifted your head.
Then it was
time to get started.
You showed no
sign of fear or regret
as he
injected the tranquilizer in back of your neck.
We waited for
it to take effect.
Alarmingly,
you suddenly rose to your feet,
as if at the
last minute you’d changed your mind!
But the
doctor dismissed this ambiguous sign.
“An
adrenaline rush is the first reaction,”
he said, as
you staggered, then wobbled,
and sank back
onto the floor again.
Your left paw
was too swollen to find a vein
to inject the
lethal dose in your blood.
But with the
right paw the doctor succeeded,
and in no
time at all I heard your last breath—
a short, soft
snort with nothing that followed—
and that’s
when I knew you were gone.
The doctor
was surprised you went so fast,
as he
listened closely to your lungs and your heart.
But I could
see plainly the body in my arms
no longer
contained its spiritual part.
Your solid,
comforting warmth I could feel
had already
begun to cool.
I didn’t know
how I’d sustain the blow,
and I began
to bawl like a fool.
After our
business arrangements were done,
the vet took
your body, packed in a bag,
away to the
pet crematorium.
We could pick
up your urn of ashes, he said,
once the
holiday weekend was over.
I’ll bury
them out by the garden, I think,
or maybe
beneath the crepe myrtle tree
where you
always went when you had to pee.
Now I miss
you so much! Our home seems so bare,
and dying
seems better than living like this!
The anguish
of absence I can’t overcome,
like a knife
blade stabbed in my gut,
and
especially at home and the places we went
I could never
count all the tears I’ve spent.
But then in a
message I think came from you
I’m reminded
of a story I heard long ago
of a monk who
complained that his daily work
kept him too
busy to be present with God.
“If you miss
me I’m with you,” God said in reply,
and you said
now it’s the same between us.
The scorching
raw grief that singes my mind
is the love
that assures our bond will survive.
You’ve only
withdrawn from the world of the senses.
In the
silence within you’re still near my side
as the sorrow
of your passing disperses.