Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Pooter (W.E. 29)



Exercise 29:
Write about a pet you had that has died.  Tell about their life from the moment you got them, up until the moment your heart was broken because of their death.


      It’s been months since I last posted anything on this blog, but without having internet, and being homeless, as well as going to college, I find it hard to find the time to post.  I do hope you enjoy this one.
      Usually at this time of day I’m working on homework for college, but it’s starting out as a slow afternoon.  My cat was laying on my lap with her gray tiger stripes, and we were having quite a loving moment.  Well, she’s kind of got obsessive compulsive order.  She started to clean herself vigorously, and it reminded me of a dear friend I had up until about two years ago.
      This friends name was Pooter.  She was a dark brown and black long haired Chihuahua who always had a problem with her weight.  She almost had the name Cleopatra for these Cleopatra shaped eyes she adorned.  It was love at first sight.
      I remember the first day I got her. She came from a litter of 8 pups, she was the only female.  I think I was maybe 15 years old and still in high school.  She had that fresh puppy smell that always reminds me of a cup of coffee.  She was just a tiny little furball just a little larger than a tennis ball.  She took me to me right off.
      We had another dog at this time, and his name was Chino, short for his full name Cappucino.  Why?  He reminded my mom of Cappucino with the color of his short haired fur.  He came from a white Chihuahua champion, and had papers go with him.  I think my mom paid around 500- 600 bucks for him, but that doesn’t mean much to me.  Every time people saw him they thought of the old Tacobell commercials with that little bug-eyed Chihuahua “Yo quiero Tacobell.”  He was not a teacup, however, and nor was he bug-eyed.  He was a normal sized Chihuahua, though most people don’t know anything about their being a “normal size.”  Most people think of those tiny little teacup ankle biters when Chihuahua’s come to mind, but this isn’t the case for Pooter and Chino.
      So why am I bringing up another dog?  The reason for this is that Chino was maybe 6 months old at the time, and he needed a pal, so we got him Pooter.  Chino was my mom’s dog and Pooter was mine.  For whatever reason I always wanted a female dog, and Pooter was it. 
      When we first brought Pooter through the door Chino seemed over excited.  My mom told him “This is your baby, take care of her.”  He kept running over her at first and knocking her over, but soon he learned to be careful.  All he wanted was to play with this cute little girl.
      Well, they both began to grow up, and Chino’s love for her grew.  Pooter loved Chino too.  It’s hard to write this as tears well up in my eyes at such a sweet tale of two lovers.
      Chino had parvo as a puppy and had survived that through a visit to the vet where he had to stay for about 3 days.  About 3 or 4 years ago he died of Doggy mumps.
      Before Chino had died Pooter was a happy dog with bright shimmering eyes.  She always wanted to seize the day.  After long walks she’d run and jump into puddles to cool herself off, which required a bath after the walk because she had made herself so dirty!  She once even ran into our front yard and jumped into the pond.  Pooter and Chino also loved to go swimming down at the lake that we lived near at the time.
      After Chino died, she lost her desire to go outside and go for walks.  It seemed like too much work for her.  Though at this time we had other dogs, she was never the same.  Her heart was broken, and I could see it in her eyes, and my own heart broke for her.  No light was shimmering in those eyes, only a sadness asking me where he had gone and when he was coming back.  I tried so hard to take care of him before he died because I knew that if he died, her heart would slow its constant beat.
      It seemed to me her heart beat only for him.  They were the two Alphas of our slowly growing pack of dogs, that now ceases to exist, but that’s another story.
      Pooter was the type of dog who was always cleaning all of the other dogs.  She was quite obsessive with it, making sure even the floor was clean of food and scraps.  This was probably why she had a weight problem.  This girl loved to eat!  I can’t say I blame her, because I’m the same, only my metabolism prevents me from growing to a larger size.
      She was about a year old when she and Chino had their first litter.  From this litter came my brothers dog…Little Bitty.  I can’t remember what we originally wanted to call her, but my bro had abandoned her, and she was not the forgiving type.  She was mostly black with brown eyes similar to Pooter’s lovely dark amber gems.  Her chest was covered in a tanish colored fur, and her paws also had a tanish color.
      Chino and Pooter always protected Little Bitty, though Pooter was sort of the coward of the bunch.  She’d only run with the pack, and not solo.  Though one time she became a criminal through the act of biting a very evil man upon his leg, after that she was sentenced to solitary confinement for 10 days because the man called animal control.  I think he was afraid he was going to get Rabies, but Pooter knew he was no good.  It was the first and only time she ever bit someone.
      Pooter had the tendency to let you know what she needed by jumping up and down and barking in a high pitched bark.  It was quite aggravating, and I never truly could understand her like I could the other dogs.  My mom understood her though.  I’m sad that the two of us could never understand each other on that level, but I know we had a deeper understanding.
      Without that shimmer in her eyes, I found that she was mostly crawling underneath the couch and just lying there for hours.  She no longer found excitement in going for walks, and I could tell that she was depressed.  I couldn’t blame her; she’d lost her one and only true love.  I would have felt the same.  All I did was love her until she became very ill.
      This is where the story must take its end.   Her kidneys began to fail and she began to pee a bloody stream upon the carpet, and at the time we couldn’t afford to take her to the vet and she initially died.  I know it was painful for her, both physically and emotionally.  This was maybe two years after the death of her mate.  I feel that the reason this happened was because she couldn’t get herself to that point of joy anymore because her one reason for living was gone.  I feel that she wanted to join him because life just wasn’t worth living without him. 
      I know deep inside that they are both in a better place now, together.  The two of them are running happily in doggy heaven, side by side.  But I still cry for them both every now and then, missing them with many breaths, and many broken heart beats.  Rest in peace Pooter and Chino: Lovers for life.