Time really does pass
by quickly! I thought I’d only missed a week of blog entries, but it seems it’s
getting close to three weeks…whoops!
The truth is that I
haven’t been feeling well lately in terms of mental and physical health.
Struggling is a word that comes to mind. I won’t go into all of it as the blog
entry “Where I am…” on the 28th of July says it all. The feelings
and thoughts I wrote about in that entry became more intense in early August and
I’ve been to see a psychologist who has helped me immensely. I do want to share
with you my revelations and the changes in my thinking…but not today…
Today I want to write
about a little puppy who has kind of broken my heart this week.
Three good boys...Odi, Ari, and Charlie |
We have been looking after
my sister-in-law’s puppy, Charlie, for the past ten nights. Charlie is ten
months old, extremely wriggly, and very, very cheeky. Our dogs, Ari and Odi,
adore him. Our cats, Felix and Frankie, on the other hand, aren’t so impressed with
Charlie being in the house. Frankie taught Charlie all about claws when he got
too close to her. Luckily Charlie is smart and went out of his way to avoid her
from then on.
As the nights passed I
realised that I was regularly counting how many more nights Charlie was staying.
It was six nights, now five, now only four. It was going way too quickly. I
didn’t want to give Charlie back. It wasn’t “Oh, Charlie is so cute – I want to
keep him” in a joking way. I couldn’t even think about giving him back. I didn’t
want to and I feared my heart would break if we did. I tried to think of ways
that we might be able to keep him, while knowing all along that it wasn’t an
option.
Even the thought of Charlie
not being here with us made me cry.
I couldn’t understand
why I felt so passionate about keeping him and so desolate at the thought of
Charlie going home. It wasn’t like we would never see him again and we had our
four fur-kids to look after and love.
It was in the
psychologist’s office, after she had asked me why I was feeling sad, that I had
a revelation. I burst into tears and
said that I didn’t want to give Charlie back because it made me think of
Minerva and losing her (see blog entry "Sweet Dreams..."). I miss her so much and giving Charlie back, while not the
same as Minerva dying, brought up intense feelings of loss.
Charlie in his bed... |
Then there was the
realisation about how nice it was to have a baby in the house. Okay, I know Charlie
is a dog, but he is also a puppy. He needed to be comforted more than Ari and
Odi (who are seven and eight respectively) and he wanted to come inside and go
to his bed to have naps. Charlie has a bed that has zippered flaps to keep him
in, but he’s managed to chew a hole through the front flap. As such we put the
front of the bed to the wall and put him in his bed using the flap at the top
of the bed.
When I picked Charlie up and put him in his bed it felt like I was
placing a baby in its cradle.
So, Charlie filled some
of the missing pieces in my heart from losing Minerva and wanting a baby. It
was comforting and I didn’t want it to end. I feared that the feelings of
sadness, loss, and even the anger, associated with these two losses would rise
again.
It seems we never
truly “get over” any loss that we experience and that grief can return, even if
only slightly, with every loss that occurs in the future. And this loss might
be as simple as having to give a puppy back to his owners after ten nights of
caring for him.
Charlie's close up... |
Charlie went home last
night. I miss him so much, and Ari is very lost without his little minion, but
it was heart-warming to see Charlie so excited to see his (human) mummy and (human)
brother after so long. It was as it should be to take Charlie home.
And now I know that my
grief about Minerva and my grief about not having a baby linger still.
4 comments:
I think grief is often intertwined. And grief lingers. It comes and goes, and just when we think it has gone, it returns again. But gradually it is less and less. I'm sorry that the joy of having Charlie in the end called so much pain.
Hi Mali - I completely agree. Grief is a strange thing...I am missing Charlie, but I wouldn't trade having him stay with us for the pain I might have with his leaving. And it is pretty cool when he comes running to us when we visit him! He is such a little comedian!
Hi my name is malia.. I am 19 and I just found out I can't have children never ..I'm in so much tears reading these.. I feel not that alone anymore.. thank you guys
Hi Malia - I'm so sorry to hear that you are unable to have children. It is a very difficult thing to know that you will never have children. You are definitely not alone - and you are always welcome here. x
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