The ill wind that blew no good

.. was no good wind at all…

Bad news should always be delivered fast I think.  So here it is.

Yesterday when I woke up I discovered that our Old Big Dog had died in the night.   I won’t put you through a nostalgic slide show. He was a good dog. And an old dog too. And now he has died quietly in his sleep.

When I looked out the window at dawn, I saw Boo circling and circling around his old mentor (the one who taught him to bark at cars up to 2 miles away) , then sitting and looking at the house, then circling again.  When I came out to see – I discovered that, under his blanket, the old dog had died. Right in the line of the sunrise, where he always slept so as to catch the first rays of the day.

Rest in Peace Big Dog.  He was almost 18 years old, his name was Cooter and he was found by John  as a pup on a construction site, tied with wire, his head at a cruel angle, to a barbed wire fence. Covered in bites and cuts and bruises. John put him in the cab of his truck and brought him home and they have wandered through life together every since –  almost 18 years.    That is a pretty long relationship.

John buried him in the shade of the tree by the root cellar, then took out a six pack and sat with him a while and allowed the sadness.

Miserably there is more.

Yesterday Daisy’s mastitis began to morph into something really evil,  holes appearing in her udder.  We have lost the fight to save her.  The vet concurred that she is not pregnant  and that the end is in sight for her. When this manifested itself one of The Fellowship was here visiting, and she knew a guy who knew a guy who came around straight away. So tomorrow the guy will come back and take her away with him in his big truck and have her put  down for me.  And that will be that.   She is in pain now but soon it will be over.  I cannot have her suffering any more of this. I think that many of you saw this coming. Mastitis is awful.  I am spraying the sores every hour to keep the flies out, it is all I can do. This will be a long day.

My neighbours heard and came over to pay their respects to the Big Dog and carried in bags of  freshly dug carrots and garden treats for Daisy, so she has piles of good tasty food to nibble while we wait.  The waiting is pretty hard.  Thankfully Daisy is a cow and does not seem to mind.  But I could just scream my head off. I am not very good at Allowing the Sadness. I do not go softly. I rage. I rage …

Sometimes don’t you feel like sitting on a stump and just Howling.  Just letting yourself Sob – loudly.  And when this great sobbing howling misery surfaces we never cry for just that one thing. We cry for it all. We cry for every last one we lost. We cry a litany. We cry for our mothers and cry for our lost babies.  We chant all their names and roll our heads and wring our minds, tears running through the dust while we scratch out all their faces and just Bawl.  Bawl.

People used to say to me that having a good cry is good for you. Well, I think that is crap. After I cry my thoat aches and my head spins and I feel just awful – then I have to crawl all over the floor and pick up every precious miserable memory and re wrap each one tightly so it will fit back into the Misery Box that I keep in my head. Because I refuse to forget any of them. Then I have to sit on the metaphorical  lid  of the metaphorical misery box so I can redo the heavy lead latch. Then once all my tears have been choked back down through the throat of the box I turn the Key. Lock. And I am alone again.

I still miss them.  I  do. But I own my sadness, it will not own me.

But I so thought Daisy was going to make it.  I really did.

Well there you are –  now we are all crying.  But that is Ok.

Tomorrow I will not be here in the farmy blog.

But the next day I will be back.  Of course I will. We will.   You and I. Because we are The Fellowship and seeing each other through this stuff is what we do.  And there is work to be done.

Love from

celi

 

 

 

143 responses to “The ill wind that blew no good”

  1. My heart grieves with you and John. Words are so inadequate at a time like this. Just know that you are being thought of and held in prayers to make it through this storm.

  2. Oh my dearest friend what a horrible start to Autumn! Sobbing as I write this, and feeling your pain, but refusing to open my box of misery right now or I’ll never get up off the floor. Please know that you are loved and will be thought of all day today – sending the biggest of hugs (which I could give them in person)

  3. I am crying with you all this morning. I am so sorry for your loss, and poor Boo and Ton will miss the old guy. After a hard start in life he came to a good place with good people who gave him a great life, he went peacefully in a safe comfortable spot.
    That is just terrible that daisy’s mastitis came back, the waiting must just be so hard to bear. You are very strong I would be just unable to function if I were in your shoes. My thoughts are with you. Hugs to you and the farmy today.
    Lori

  4. Ah, so sorry. I’ve lost dogs before, never a cow, but I know the helpless feeling of having an animal who’s suffering and there’s nothing to be done. Take care of yourself.
    love
    Melissa

  5. Bless your hearts…and bless Old Dog and Daisy too…. some days are diamonds, some days are stone…. this would be one of the stones….. My heart mourns for your losses and aches with remembered griefs…. tomorrow will come, but for today, let it go, Dear…. Hugs and kisses from Kansas

  6. Oh Celi! I am so very sorry for your double-left to the chin (and heart). A one-two punch that caught you off guard and as you say, leaves you on the floor. I pray you’ll find some comfort in the days to come, in animals that were loved and treated grandly throughout their lives. It’s especially difficult with Daisy I’d imagine, because you tried so very hard for a different outcome. Damn mastitis!! Hugs and prayers for your heart and your dear husband’s heart as well.

  7. I’ll keep you tucked deep in my thoughts until I feel you’re able to stumble and pick yourself up again. A person needs to know that they’ll recover from a stumble. xx

    >

  8. Oh, C, I am sorry beyond words almost, except a writer is never at a loss for words. If you can’t bawl, then cry. And understand that you need not lock away the sorrow or hold it in or ever feel alone. You are not and must not.

  9. Indeed, crying sucks yet it seems to be an essentail process. I don’t look for reasons and I don’t cry that often, I feel it is mostly a reaction to the loneliness that creeps deep inside. For those who have died and have impacted my life I am calmed by knowing they really haven’t gone that far. My mother still has my back, a dog I had 40 years ago still walks beside me now and then; all there keeping me compay.

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