Finding Ninee » Sharing our parenting and special needs stories with heart and humor.

The Loss of a Dog is a Real Loss

THEN

December 30, 2021, the eve of the final night of the year, another day, another second

A blog post titled “What Not to Say Regarding a Loss People Tell You is No Big Deal” was fresh on my keyboard and in my heart. I was writing, processing, and mourning. I was ready to write. Figured it was time.

Until I wasn’t ready at all.

While the loss of a dog is a real loss, I couldn’t share. Rather than see the draft status of my post as a challenge, I closed my laptop.

I was going to write, but…

PRESENT DAY

August 12, 2022, a night I again host Finish the Sentence Friday – the first in a long time 

The post on loss I wanted to write but never published remains in my drafts. On this night, I plan to write. Too many moments, months, and seconds have passed. Or, possibly, not enough of any of them. 

I miss writing, although saying so feels too simple. Maybe it’s enough to say that tonight, I feel ready to write. I want to write about this loss and know I need to.

Sometimes, for a second? I forget she’s gone. I walk into the house, and grief slashes and slays me all the way through.

Writing is like shedding tears. It hurts like hell, but it helps. 

THEN

September 16, 2018

On this day, we were delivering on our promise. The promise to get Tucker a dog once we started to consider moving back to Colorado and then went through with it.

He misses his friends, his school, and the view from the only bedroom window he’s known until now. I’d been hesitant to get another dog after Chief, who was so much more than a dog. I didn’t think another would ever be as perfect. A promise is a promise though, and there’s a lot to be said about a boy and his dog.

We’d been trying to find a rescue puppy for a while.

We met Nugget at an adoption fair on a warm fall day that felt more like summer.  We’d hung out with several older dogs, and some seemed like they might be a good fit. Until they didn’t. We’d given up for the day and were on our way out.

While leaving, we noticed three puppies wriggling in the grass. College students played with them in a circle. They were smiling, admiring puppy paws, ears, and warmth. From the looks of it, I figured each puppy had been adopted and the people playing on the grass were waiting on paperwork.

Bummed that today’s mission wasn’t successful, we sat down anyway. Who doesn’t have time to stop and admire a puppy stagger at an adoption event on a random Saturday afternoon?

So, we sat. Asked the circle which human was waiting on which puppy, prepared to wish them years of joy.

“None of us are adopting,” one of the girls said. “We’re just playing with them. Our next class is over there,” she said, pointing to a campus building.

And then we knew.

The adoption event volunteer came over as the girls stood to go to class. Robert asked about the puppy’s stories. Three sister puppies came from Mexico. Their breed was Australian Cattle Dog and Sneaky Unknown Daddy Dog Breed.

“Which one is the calmest?” Robert asked.

“That one,” she said, pointing to the one Tucker was holding.

She was ours and Tucker named her Nugget. I asked if maybe her name came from a video game character or something, but no.

“Just like a chicken nugget,” he said. “Except cuter.”

Whatever day, in the pandemic; when school was online 

“I just need my dog,” Tucker said. Online learning wasn’t going well. That’s putting it mildly.

Snuggling Nugget was Tucker’s therapy during online learning and often life. I think that Nugget snuggles held us all together here, but were especially important for Tucker.

November 21, 2021, REFLECTING

I once read dogs have no sense of time. It makes sense, especially given my super-scientific proof that whether I’m gone for eight hours or 30 minutes, each dog I’ve been lucky enough to love has been excited to see me.

November 21, 2021, four days before Thanksgiving, a million years into the pandemic

Maybe it’s true that dogs have no sense of time. But I do, and tonight, I can only think of Nugget. She’s at home in her crate. We have human-only places to be, and she’s recovering from her third treatment. 

I can’t wait to go home, and ask her whether she killed a dinosaur.

November 23, 2021, two days before Thanksgiving, a million worries and wonders and pride – our girl Nugget is a fighter

“What do you think Nugget’s thinking now?” Tucker asks. We look at her, warming our feet on the couch after playing ball until the sun became pink and then orange and then a shade of light that only she could see or hear. 

While people say dogs have no sense of time, Nugget knows the difference between moments alone and ones spent playing and snuggling with her humans. Certainly, nighttimes spent with a young boy and his dreams are cozier than the seconds or hours she waits for her two-legged family members to return home. Or the ones when she’s at that other place, getting a treatment that makes her feel better or worse. We only know that she seems better once it’s been completed. And so we continue.

October 31, 2021, Halloween night

She’s a little wobbly, but good, and so proud to be able to carry a dinosaur on her back. 

Random days in October and November 2021, when frustration, tears, vet appointments, and hope mingle together, each floating randomly to the surface like the letters in alphabet soup

Nugget wasn’t eating. It was obvious she didn’t feel well, and I figured we were looking at surgery for swallowing too many pieces of a rope toy. I knew more than one person whose dog had been through it, and it seemed obvious.

Except, it wasn’t a problem where she ate a rope toy, and needed surgery. Once, I thought that surgery was bad, but this time, it’d be welcome.

I just want her to feel good. To be her occasionally annoying self, waiting on me for fetch, or whatever. Her googly eyes and expectant ears drew me to the yard pretty much every time.

November 26, 2021, the night after Thanksgiving

Nugget’s fetching, and playing, and not at all wobbly. She’s eating and happy, and we joked about our Million Dollar dog. Her treatments are worth it. We see her as she’s supposed to be, and she, in this moment, forgets to see herself at all. 

Maybe that’s the most important lesson of all that we can learn from a dog.

To forget to see ourselves at all.

 

November 27, 2021, two days after Thanksgiving, a Saturday morning

Last night, Nugget was doing well. 

This morning, we had to say goodbye. 

She was 3-½ years old. It kills me that she looked afraid. That she looked at me like I knew what to do when I had no idea. 

Now, tonight, right here, back in the moment of Finish the Sentence Friday, er… almost. After all, I was going to write, but…

I miss Nugget. She was uniquely herself. She was sweet and would have chewed a dude’s face off if they messed with Tucker. She was the best dog in the world. 

Now, tonight, right here, back in the moment of Finish the Sentence Friday TAKE 2

We recall the minutes and hours that shape us. They are so powerful and unique that words can not describe them. While these moments feel like too much, and too powerful to write about, it seems like we should try. 

After all, it’s important to remember, even when it hurts.

I was going to write, but, I didn’t. 

Until I did. 

 

 

This has been a Finish the Sentence Friday Post. Issues with the Link company resolved. Please link up here. Love to you all.
-Kristi

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  • Lizzi - You still write so damn beautifully. I’m gutted for you about Nugget. I had an inkling when the pics dried up. Poor Tucks. Poor you all. And poor Nugget. Damn 😔August 13, 2022 – 11:15 pmReplyCancel

    • Kristi Campbell - As always, you’re my favorite. Thank you and I’m gutted too. It’s been a while and I’ve been thinking of writing but just well. Could not even say it out loud in my mouth or on this page, you know?
      Poor Tucks for sure. My whole everything is that.August 20, 2022 – 10:03 pmReplyCancel

  • Kenya G. Johnson - I’m soooo sorry for your loss and just as sorry that I didn’t see that Nugget was missing 😒 I’m so glad Tucker had him for a while especially through one of the hardest and isolating times in our lives. Nugget was there. Much love to you all.August 14, 2022 – 3:20 amReplyCancel

    • Kristi Campbell - I think I made it impossible for anybody to see Nugget was missing. I just couldn’t. Thank you. Reading “Nugget was there” is love in itself. xoAugust 20, 2022 – 10:04 pmReplyCancel

  • Sara - Heart wrenching. I feel this deeply. Sweet Nugget. Love to you & Tux. <3August 14, 2022 – 9:23 amReplyCancel

    • Kristi Campbell - OMG thank you. I know you know that I know what you know about the feeling stuff that you know you’re feeling and…. xo mwah.August 20, 2022 – 10:05 pmReplyCancel

  • Julie - Oh sweet Nugget – you all were so lucky to have found each other, such a wonderful friend for Tucker and unique friend to you. And I’m so glad you did write it. We can measure our lives in dogs now, and our friendship in the dogs between us. Sigh, rest in peace sweet Nugget. ❤️🐾August 14, 2022 – 12:11 pmReplyCancel

    • Kristi Campbell - What a thing, to be able to measure our lives in dogs. I’ll never forget Zonk behind the Papasan and then later Aurthur missing him like cray cray… xoxo for real.August 20, 2022 – 10:07 pmReplyCancel

  • clark - The un-kindest math in the world is that which governs the relationship of our lives with our dogs.
    They give of themselves so effortlessly, so naturally, we are tricked into failing to account for all they give us.

    (Would we have it any other way? Their unconditional love is such a miracle disguised as the ordinary, we should forgive ourselves for forgetting how rare it is in life.)

    And yet, we must account. And it is this inverse proportion of pain, (but really more of an ache that piles all of its future discomfit into the moment) to the joy we have that is the terrible price we pay.

    And, none of us, regret incurring this debt, much as it feels like we do. With time we accept that our animals are a part of us, present or not.August 14, 2022 – 3:42 pmReplyCancel

    • Kristi Campbell - Clark. You kill me and help me soar with these words “the un-kindest math in the world is that which governs the relationship of our lives with our dogs.”
      GAH.
      As you said, we never once regret incurring this debt of the best love ever.August 20, 2022 – 10:09 pmReplyCancel

  • clark - …quick note:
    You are still every bit the bloghop hostinae that you’ve always been. My previous comment, while well-intentioned, is evidence of the atmosphere you engender for participants and your own writing ability which does this thing that whispers to all of us, “Write”

    coolAugust 14, 2022 – 4:50 pmReplyCancel

    • Kristi Campbell - Gah.THANK YOU. I very much need for this whisper”write” to carry me again. I miss all of this.August 20, 2022 – 10:10 pmReplyCancel

  • Emily - Ohhh Kristi I am so so sorry for you and your family…what a heartbreaking loss of sweet Nugget. We had to say goodbye to our sweet Matilda this past June and we are still grieving and missing her everyday. So I get it — I really do. xoxoAugust 14, 2022 – 6:54 pmReplyCancel

    • Kristi Campbell - Gah Emily,
      So sorry about Matilda. I saw the FB, and it’s so dang gutting. Hard to take. Also, did I see you took a chance on a new fluff?August 20, 2022 – 10:11 pmReplyCancel

  • Tamara - Ohh.. Nugget! I didn’t know! I’m so sorry. We’ve all been so out of sorts, but I’m thankful for FTSF this week. We’ve all had so much to say. The loss of an loved animal is at times as bad or worse as the loss of a loved human. I once read that it hurts as much, but not for as long. I have experienced that personally but it’s different for all.
    Dogs are just.. they’re everything. I miss her for you.August 15, 2022 – 1:51 pmReplyCancel

    • Kristi Campbell - To be fair, nobody knew. I said nothing after putting it out there asking for experiences. Some were positive, and some were heartbreaking. I didn’t know where this was going and instead of asking and sharing, I hid. Until this, I guess.August 20, 2022 – 10:14 pmReplyCancel

  • A. J. Goode - Oh, Kristi. Our furbabies come into our lives and take a piece of our hearts with them when they go. I’m so sorry you only got to love Nugget for such a short time.

    Thank you for sharing this. I needed the reminder to give my Rosie a few extra hugs and pets today.August 20, 2022 – 6:08 amReplyCancel

  • Dana - It’s absolutely a real loss, and I understand your reluctance to write about it. We said goodbye to our Bear in April 2020, and I couldn’t post about it anywhere – the circumstances were bad, and well, I’m still grieving over two years later. I’m so sorry Nugget wasn’t with you longer; it’s never long enough, is it? Love coming here and reading your words again. Maybe I’ll join next time. xoxoAugust 21, 2022 – 11:06 amReplyCancel

  • Deborah L Bryner - I’m so sorry, Kristi…it hurts every single time, whether we have lost a dog, cat, gerbil, or goldfish…and each of our animal friends leave a huge hole in our hearts. Sending you many hugs and much love…September 16, 2022 – 6:53 pmReplyCancel

  • Karin - Kristi, It breaks my heart to read this. The time you all had with Nugget was too short, she was a special dog. Losing a pet is more than difficult. In our case, Odin, who could be a royal pain in the butt (as you know!) still holds a special place in my heart, even after all these years. They are all together now at the rainbow bridge playing together ❤️January 1, 2023 – 11:06 amReplyCancel

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