Putting The Old Fella Down
The
bond between a man and his new dog fuses almost instantly; from then on, its
strength depends upon individual circumstances.
In my and my German shepherd's case, it only intensified due to the
facts that I had him alone, he was my only dog, and we were virtually
inseparable for so many years.
"Montag"
- Monday in German - was born on the day the Senate Watergate Committee heard
H.R.Haldeman testify that he and President Nixon had no knowledge of Watergate.
Skylab 2 circled the earth. Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam were still front-page
news. "American Graffiti" was
the new movie that summer. On the day I took the little fella home at age eight
weeks, the Dow Jones hit 920; I was 28. That's
how far back he went. So much happened
since then. He spanned two thirds of my adult life.
To
say that Montag and I spent an enormous amount of good time together would be
an understatement. Few people who know
me now knew my life without him; many never knew me without him. The "outside interests" line on
his rsum would look like mine
except for the SCUBA diving: jogging,
backpacking, cross-country skiing, traveling, outdoor concerts, to name a few;
he was always with me. On many weekends
he was a fixture at my office with me. At home, he permeated my life. It wasn't all fun and games for the two of us
though. But we were both there for each other doing what we were supposed to
do. I never lost sight of the fact that
he was a dog; to his credit, neither did he. He had a pretty good deal and so
did I. We both knew that.
Dogs
destined to live to an old age do their masters a favor by sending unmistakable
signs of the inevitable separation well in advance. Montag was no exception.
Looking back now over the years I can clearly trace what he stopped doing and
when. But it was easy to ignore those
signs because the bond between us intensified as the fun times were replaced
with caring and understanding. I wanted it to continue forever, but I knew that
it couldn't.
The
medical signs, however, couldn't be ignored, not with a 110 pound dog. Over
Montag’s last 16 months, I successfully navigated him between two tumor
operations and learned how to cope with a few predictable consequences of his
aging. Montag was never in pain, but he
was getting old. In his last few months,
although otherwise in good shape, he gradually started to go lame in his right
hind leg. Convinced by the veterinarian
when a decision couldn't be postponed that surgery, as a long shot, might work,
I went ahead with it. I simply couldn't
let Montag go without doing everything humanely within reason for him.
After a difficult five week nursing period,
longer than the vet suggested, I had to make another decision. The operation was unsuccessful; Montag would
never walk again. An emotional decision would have kept him here a few weeks
longer, but there really was no cause for hope.
The
painful decision to put Montag down became irreversible when he still couldn't
walk on the designated day. The rest of that day had been rehearsed many times
over in my mind. I carried him over the same threshold we had crossed together
thousands of times and then 150 feet to my Jeep. We pulled out at 7:30 in the morning for the
70 mile drive to the veterinary hospital.
I kept one hand on Montag for the entire trip. Tears were the rule, not
the exception. The weather was just
foul: heavy rain, a dark sky, lightning and thunder. Five minutes before the hospital, I cried
"I'm going to miss you so much, Montag. I promise we'll be together
again."
An
unexpected 45 minute wait at the hospital was welcome, but it only added to my
pain. I sat in my Jeep, alone, with
Montag in the back. My heart sank when
finally someone knocked on my door and said, "We're ready." Weakened from grief, I reached back, touched
Montag and said, "It's over, fella."
I drove to the alley in the rear of the hospital so Montag could be
euthanized in my Jeep with privacy and wouldn't have to be carried inside. I
got into the back with him and removed his collar, setting him free
forever. The vet and her assistant
emerged in heavy rainwear and immediately took positions at the rear of the
Jeep. With tears streaming down my face and Montag cradled in my arms, I
repeatedly whispered to him, "I love you, Montag. Good-bye, buddy. Thanks
so much. You're a good dog." His
strong body at first resisted the drug that the vet injected into his left
front leg. I pleaded with him, "Please don't fight us this time,
Montag." His weakening body
suddenly slumped in my arms. The vet climbed into the Jeep with us, listened
for his heartbeat , and then announced, "He's gone." With those words, a very large and important
part of my world collapsed.
Alone, I sat holding Montag for a few minutes
longer. There was no feeling of relief.
If ever before I felt more anguish, I cannot remember. I shut his eyes, put a make-shift pillow of
towels under his head, and closed up the back of the Jeep. Finally composed, I
sought out and thanked the vet for her humane treatment and left. At the pet
crematory, 20 miles down the road, I carried Montag myself from the Jeep and
stayed not far from his side for five hours while he was cremated. After all, he stayed at my side for
14 years.
Seven
hours after Montag was put down, I was home with his ashes. The small
"German Shepherd Dog Inside" sign on my front door, there for
emergency purposes, was no longer needed. Perhaps it now belonged on the small
box that I clutched in my left arm. It really belonged on my heart.
That
evening, I changed my will - I want my
ashes scattered with Montag's over a site in the mountains where we spent many
good weekends together. I intend to keep
my promise to him. Before I went to bed,
I suddenly felt the only joy in a long time when I thought how lucky I was to
have had such a great dog for such a very long time. But that's also why
putting the old fella down that day was the saddest and toughest thing I can
ever remember having to do. I miss him so much.
NOTE: Montag was put down at 9:50am on
Saturday, August 22, 1987. His ashes
were scattered at the foot of Jeremey’s Run in Virginia’s Shenandoah Mountains
in October 1990. Sonntag and Kessie, his successors, were with me.