rodeo65
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Feb 1, 2009
- Messages
- 1,461
I'm so sorry for your loss!
It is such a difficult thing to do even when we know it's right.
When we had to put *my* terrier/poddle cross down five weeks after DS was born it was such a hard day for me. I had adopted him long before I met DS or had children so he was MY buddy. When the day came the vet said something that helped with the decision and I still think about now - as we face it again with our 15 year old peke/spaniel. He said he could give him medication for the weekend to make him as comfortable as possible and I could spend those last couple of days with him but that it would be for ME. My dog would not thank me for it and that the fact that he was refusing food meant it was his time. That made it a very simple decision - painful, not easy, but simple.
It is a little more complicated this time since our dog's time is coming but due to age, not disease. She is beginning to falter in her hind end - legs give out more and more often, but she still plays and wags her tail. She is having accidents more and more on the carpet but she is still alert. She is deaf and losing her vision but eats and drinks normally. It is a much more difficult thing to consider this time because there is not a clear "sign".
JoiseyMom - your dog thanked you for your final act of kindness. I hope your grief process is helped knowing you did the best thing you could do.
It is such a difficult thing to do even when we know it's right.When we had to put *my* terrier/poddle cross down five weeks after DS was born it was such a hard day for me. I had adopted him long before I met DS or had children so he was MY buddy. When the day came the vet said something that helped with the decision and I still think about now - as we face it again with our 15 year old peke/spaniel. He said he could give him medication for the weekend to make him as comfortable as possible and I could spend those last couple of days with him but that it would be for ME. My dog would not thank me for it and that the fact that he was refusing food meant it was his time. That made it a very simple decision - painful, not easy, but simple.
It is a little more complicated this time since our dog's time is coming but due to age, not disease. She is beginning to falter in her hind end - legs give out more and more often, but she still plays and wags her tail. She is having accidents more and more on the carpet but she is still alert. She is deaf and losing her vision but eats and drinks normally. It is a much more difficult thing to consider this time because there is not a clear "sign".
JoiseyMom - your dog thanked you for your final act of kindness. I hope your grief process is helped knowing you did the best thing you could do.
"Her" face that I loved for 19 years is everywhere I go.....
It was fate!!!! The story behind it too long to tell, but bascially involves not having papers. I didn't care. She and a silver/gray sister were there. Both of them gorgeous. I asked them to put a hold on her and got in the car right away. That was the start of our 19 years together.