Sheba has done damage to her foot. This time, I could find the wound and treat it and put a sock on her foot. It will heal quickly, but we spent the day at home without walks. It was a glorious sunny day, but cool, and colder weather is on its way. Sigh. I just pray that there will be no snow, because should it snow, I do not want to walk. It is very tiring trudging through snow, and my heart cannot sustain that.
Last evening, Sheba seemed to be choking. It panicked me, so I called Regina to ask for advice about where to take her, thinking she might need surgery to remove something caught in her throat. Our local vet doesn’t do surgery. But Regina calmed me, telling me it’s a common problem with some dogs, so last night we slept on the hide-a-bed in the living room which is lower to the ground and easier for Sheba to mount with her sore paw.
This morning, we are off to the vet.
I cannot believe how deeply, deeply attached I am to Sheba. We are never apart, except for the odd social date or hospitalization. Best of all, we sleep side by side. In the mornings, as soon as I see her, all that matters is going to her to hug her, to talk to her, and to kiss her, and our days end in the same way. I am besotted.
I realize that my previous paragraph might put some people off. But for me, this love I have for her, and for Fred and Ethel, is my best medicine. It feels so very, very good to love them.
Loving a human being is not easy for me. I mistook lust for love, I was desperate which is not alluring, and I was a virgin—not sexually, but emotionally. I grew up without love, unaware of what I was missing. In its place grew a lack of trust of others. I was kind of doomed, but then I met Aleck.
I won’t bore you with the story of Aleck, because I’ve written about it here before. What matters is a neglected cat came to be mine, and we healed each other. It was for Aleck that I felt love for the first time. I believe he saved me.
Leon was a similar story. He belonged to a fellow who lived at the other end of my condo building from me, and he was constantly away doing business in Berlin and LA. Leon would go out the window of his home and walk along the roof meeting the neighbours. When he found me, a single and retired older man who was at home a lot, he stayed. Again, a neglected soul found mine.
Aleck, Spike, Bela (as in Bartok), Leon, Fred, Ethel and Her Highness, they have filled my world with love. And love spread to include all animals. My friends with whom we walk our dogs know. I thrill to the touch of their dogs and all the other dogs—and sometimes horses—whom we meet on the trails.
No photos today, I must get to the vet. Back tomorrow.