GTT: Heartbreak

This week for Girl Talk Thursday, we’re sharing tales of heartbreak. Drop by, leave your thoughts, and please, if you like — participate!

I have thought a lot about this topic today.  There are two men who have broken my heart.  One of them, I’ve talked about already; one of them, I will talk about later.  And so I kept thinking…. what else in my life has been heartbreaking?  I’ve been fortunate not to lose any family or friends.

Then I remembered Bear.

Growing up, I never wanted a chihuahua or any sort of small dog.  I wanted a big dog, a hunter, a guardian.  But when I met Bear, we kind of fell in love with each other, and that was that.

Bear, like me, was a first child.  He lived with my mom, and he was the first puppy of her chihuahuas’ first litter.  When he was born, his mom was so terrified by the fact that she was giving birth that she ran away, leaving him on the floor.  My mom had to pull the sac off him and clean him.  He was the biggest puppy of the litter, and that’s what earned him the name Bear.

He was a few years old when we met, which means that he should have picked His Person by then, the way chihuahuas do.  He hadn’t really, though.  He was looking for someone to love, and I was hurt, vulnerable, just out of a painful relationship, and looking to be loved.  We bonded instantly.

But, I was heading to Canada, and while Chris was open to the possibility of us having a pet, he did not want a chihuahua.  So I spent a lot of time taking various “what kind of dog suits your personality” quizzes online, browsing the AKC website, and looking at breeders within driving distance of where we would be living.  I never ended up with chihuahua on those quizzes.

And so, in the weeks before I left to Canada, I tried to keep myself distant from Bear.  I tried not to love him, or let him jump into my lap; he needed to get attention from other people, not me.  I would be leaving soon, and it would do him no good to grow more attached to me.

A week or so before I left, I took Bear to the vet to get neutered.  The veterinarian said to me, “So, I hear this little guy’s going to Canada,” to which I replied, sadly, “No, he’s not going to Canada, but I wanted him to.”

Chris came down to steal me away on December 27th, and gave me my Christmas gift — a very lightweight gift bag.  I had no idea what was in it; this was our first Christmas together and I didn’t know his gift giving style.

In the bag was a dog harness.  A small one.  A chihuahua sized one.

I looked up at him, confused.  Looked at my mom, confused.  Looked at Bear, who stared at me and shivered in that stupid adorable chihuahua way.

Bear was coming to Canada with us.

“I can’t believe you believed me,” Chris said, as I snotted all over his shoulder and cried with happiness.

“I thought for sure that dumb vet blew our secret,” my mom added.

Bear sat on my lap for most of the 8 hour drive to Canada.  For some of it, he laid on the armrest between Chris and I; for a very little while, he draped himself across Chris’ shoulders.  Then he came back to me.  We stopped at the Canadian border to “make him official”, expecting to have to do a lot of paperwork and prove all of his vaccinations and whatnot; instead, a border guard pointed at Bear with a grin and said, “Poof!  He’s Canadian.”

Bear slept in our bed every night.  He spent every day in my lap or at my heel.  He loved me endlessly, and although I think a lot of that had to do with the fact that he was terrified of everything else in the world, I loved him right back.

A year and a half later, a week to the day before our wedding, Bear woke me up in the morning — something he never did.  He was pressed against my face and panting as the sun rose.  We had a house guest and so I thought perhaps Bear was just nervous about hearing someone else move around, so I lifted the sheets and he wandered down to my calves, curling up against them, breathing heavily.  I fell back asleep.

He woke me up again shortly thereafter, and I realized something was wrong.  I took him outside, in case he needed to do his business, and although he squatted like he was going to, nothing came out.  I figured he was constipated, but paired with the fact that he was still panting and had wild eyes, I started googling things like “my dog is trying to pee but nothing happens”.  Meanwhile, our houseguest had woken up and was talking with Chris.

I curled up on the couch with Bear after googling that, terrified of what I had found.  Almost everything said to take him into a vet’s office immediately, that he had some sort of urethral blockage and needed medical attention or he would die very soon; a few things said he could pass his blockage soon.  I chose to listen to the latter, even though my gut was screaming at me to get him to a vet.  We did not have the money for a vet visit; we were young, trying to get my residency, and getting married soon.

But within the next twenty minutes, I couldn’t ignore my panic anymore.  Chris and I took Bear to the vet.

They confirmed my worst fears.

We gave him painkillers, she said, he is in a lot of pain.  We need to do surgery immediately.

How much will that cost? I don’t remember if Chris asked or I did.

She handed us a mock-up bill.  $1700 … and that was with pricing him as a cat, not a dog, because he was so small.

We couldn’t do it.  We could NOT afford that money.

We made the decision to put him to sleep.

Do you want to come say goodbye? the vet asked me.

I said no; I could not look at him and tell him we were letting him go because we couldn’t afford him.  It tore at my gut; I was sobbing loudly, I was a mess, and this is the only time I’ve seen Chris cry.  Still, he stood up. I will, he said.   Because he is the strong one, and he did not want Bear to go without seeing one of us one last time.

To this day, I wish I had said goodbye.

bear

14 Responses to GTT: Heartbreak

  • Jenny says:

    This is the hardest post to read that I’ve read all day long. I’m thinking of my Bo (beagle) and my little Daisy (chihuahua/terrier mix) and my heart breaks for you – for me – for all of them. I fear this more than almost anything – it’s right up there with the thought of losing my ACTUAL children. … ugh. I’m so sad now… :(

  • Erin W. says:

    When I was 21 I had to go stay at my Gramma’s house for a month. Every day I was there I went home to feed my pets. I had 2 cats that stayed inside and I had a dog in the backyard. At the time there were a couple holes in our fence, so we had to keep Maisely on a chain. One day when I went home to feed her she wasn’t there. My next door neighbor came over when she saw my car and said that Maisely had gotten out but she had her inside her house until I got home. I put her back on her chain, made sure it was attached properly and that her collar was on properly. The next day when I came home she was gone again. This time her collar was still attached to the chain.
    Maisely was a pitbull and her head was big, so I know she didn’t slip out of her collar. Someone took it off her, let her loose, and reattached it to the chain. I called the pound every day for a week and they said the didn’t have her. I put up posters. Finally after a week I took her picture to the pound and the lady at the desk told me that they had gotten her in a week prior and put her down 2 days later. I was (and am) so upset that she had to die like that. I felt like such a failure to her.
    I don’t know what it is about pet stories that make me want to share mine – I hope you don’t mind. Thanks for posting. ((hugs))

  • I am crying now. Losing a pet is so hard. Hugs.

  • Diane says:

    That breaks my heart. My cat died when I was a child, and that has somewhat hardened my heart to pets. I just don’t want them because of how much it hurts to lose one. And I know that’s incredibly stupid, but man. I read something like this, and all I can say is I admire your ability to open your heart again. I have no idea when or if I’ll ever be ready or able to do that.

  • Marilyn says:

    Making the decision to put down a pet is so so hard. And I know how extra hard it is when the decision is partly financial. I’ve been there and I hope I don’t have to be there again but I know I will be. We just need to do the best we can and love our little friends as hard as we can while we can.

  • Melanie says:

    This post brought me to tears. My mom had to put down one of my cats when I was little and I’ll never forget it. It’s one of the hardest things and I hope my dog dies in his sleep so I won’t have to make this decision..don’t know how I’d explain it to my son.

  • Della says:

    I’ve never had to make that decision, but if it was there before me today, I would have to make the same one. I understand as deeply as one can who hasn’t actually done it. Gonna go hug my beagle now.

    I’m sorry.

  • Awww Bearrr! That dog had such the character. He was really, really awesome. It was so sad when this whole thing happened. I’m sorry you still hurt so much from it. :(

  • Gala says:

    Having to make a decission like this in such a short amount of time is so hard. When I had to put Pedro down, I had a lot of warning and time to grieve about what I knew would probably have to be done. After I put him down, I couldn’t go back to the vet for over a year–I made my husband go. I fineally had to go, because I had to take my new kitten, and Rick is allergic and just couldn’t do it. I have only been to where Pedro is buried in the back yard once. I look in his direction all the time and say “Pee-do, Pee-do”. Still makes me want to cry.

  • MommyGeek says:

    Oh… oh honey. This post makes me cry. That’s hard. It’s so hard to have regrets. It’s hard to have to choose.

  • GAH!!!!!!! I am crying so hard I’m going to short out my laptop. I have had to put several animals down for various reasons. It is JUST like a family member dying to me (well, at least a family member you love). Thanks (I think) for sharing your story. I can’t even bring myself to scroll up to look at his cute little face again. See, I can’t even say goodbye and I never met him. GAHHHHH!

  • Boy Crazy says:

    I am bawling!!! I know the love for a dog, although your Bear was probably smaller than my Wilson’s head (he’s a 95 lb German Shepherd). So sad. But I get it, I really do. So sorry you had to choose – it’s a horrible spot to be in.

  • Zak says:

    We had to put our poodle to sleep last April, he was 14 and had kidney failure.

    I couldn’t make myself drive him, so my Mom took him and stayed with him. I said goodbye to him in the garage.

    I still feel like an ass for that, but I just couldn’t do it. I felt like I was killing my child.

    I’m glad that your husband was able to go. RIP Bear.

  • Mary Jo says:

    I was just reading some of your older posts, when I came across this. My heart is so sad to read this. 2 years ago my husband and I came close to losing our older beagle Snoopy… he needed surgery (only $600, not $1700) and we did not have that money. We were so lucky though that we had a vet willing to take payments. Our vet at that time was in a poor area of town and did a lot of procedures at discounted rates and with payments allowed. It was a blessing for us. I wish it didn’t have to happen that way for you.

    I’m sorry that you lost your Bear.

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