Monday, November 15, 2021

November

.

                            My sweetheart, snaps from Novembers gone by.

                Loved with a love beyond all feeling, Missed with a grief beyond all tears.





We were listening to Tapestry (well, I was) and I shot a video of him refusing to look at me. Cherished.




He was four here, still loved first snow.









     Several shots from 2011, he LOVED  that big rock and always jumped up on it every single time we   walked that trail, even in the snow. <3 Happiest days of my life, bar none.


                                           First November at the new place



                                    Oh that little babyface he did, and the ears....2017




 2018.....He looks kind of miserable but he LOVED that grinch, courtesy of the Bark Box. (we had given up trying to trim nails at this pint, with his heart diagnosis and how over the top he got about trims)
At this point, 12 and three months, I could see some changes, we were getting more bloodwork, and he often looked  unwell in pics, but would explode into normal Danny behaviour once the camera was gone. I adjusted and re-adjusted his diet...and walked twice a day, albeit shorter ones. I look back and wonder if he was really sad, having left all our joyful days of freedom behind. But he never seemed very happy when I took him back to the old trails, he looked forward to  his short, leashed walks around here seemingly much more.



A lot more of this  (above)  by November 2019. He was 13 and three months and seemed tired a lot. A few months later he would start passing blood in his urine,intermittently, and we did Xrays, urinalysis etc but no ultrasound as the thinking was, it was prostate. Really, it was the first signs of his cancer. I just kept him warm and comfy and well fed and entertained in short bursts. On the occasions he'd get up and be his "old self" - throw a catbed, rip up a cardboard box, empty a garbage basket - my heart both sang with joy and ached with foreshadowing. I knew we were nearing the end, but I was managing my grief by focusing on fighting for him.

There are no pics from November 2020, his last: by then we knew he had GOLPP on top of the heart disease and he was passing bloody urine daily, sometimes with clots. I was in no mood for pictures, also a month after finding out my "lumbar sprain" is actually four vertebral fractures due to severe osteoporosis. It was a terribly hard time. I don't know what altered state I was in that pulled me through Christmas, but I did it - presents, meals, the tree. Maybe that's how I got through the inevitability of losing Danny.  And he stayed stable for me, with his  severe blood and blockages starting in January, and his final day in early February.

 Danny, my Rabbit, I love and miss you so.The joy you brought me will last forever...even as  this sorrow will as well.




Tuesday, November 2, 2021

Samhain, 2021

 This Samhain - last night/today, is my first without my Dan in 15 years. We had 15 of them together and now, I walk forward without his physical presence beside me, not now nor ever again.
That said, he is strongly here in spirit, when I call. And yesterday/ last night - I called.

I am in a strange place, spiritually. It's a lot to go into, and I'm sure many are dealing with the same - loss, depression, despair for the world, broken hearted, fearful  - some have the kind of faith that pulls them through these Dark Nights - others like myself, kind of have to do it on our own. I've neglected a lot of what I consider my spiritual practise, these past few years since I became the sole breadwinner, experienced severe health issues, and watched my darling heart Danny weaken and die.  I realized recently the time spent in spiritual practise, in Inner work, in offerings and meditation, in sacred art and reading - in the forest! is not time I can just cut out of my life to answer a few dozen more emails, squeeze in time to mark assignments, help set up a new site or blog. After doing my client work and caring for my animals, it's next on the list. And already I feel...supported and stronger. I decided to do something yesterday and today, although I don't feel up to ritual, I honoured my ancestors and reached out to my sweetheart, I cooked (applesauce,Gabe's meatloaf shared with Dan, soul cakes as always and Nikiah Seed's intriguing spicy chocolate cake.). I sained the house, lit candles for my ancestors of blood and place, and  journaled.

I also cut down some mugwort (my stand out back is just incredible  - new shoots and leaves all the time) and harvested some rosemary, to make bundles, with the cedar I brought form Rupert, last visit. Today I will take them to the cemetery, where I plan to visit the ancestors buried there, in Rupert - going back four generations as far as I can track them - my great great grandparents buried near the sacred place I lived for 12 years. I will just leave a few on the graves of the people who lived here so many years ago, as I bless them and thank them for my life. Nothing more, not yet - although my work healing ancestral pain has a long way to go, it's so important to move cautiously.


Danny in about....2011? At a favorite Sit Spot of mine while I was doing the Kamana work. The Rupert Union Cemetery is in the far right corner, where several generations of my maternal grandmother's family are buried.





My great great grandparent's grave, in Rupert- apparently James' mother is buried here as well, she is down on record as having died here - but I cannot locate her grave as yet.

I have resumed my ancestral and animism studies with Daniel Foor, and allotted specific times daily to make offerings, to tend my shrines, to read and relax.

And yes, with a seven month old puppy who would give the fabled Marley a run for the money, plus a more-than-fulltime job,  this isn't easy. This morning while I made coffee, Gabriel started pulling the new mattress apart - he has already ripped my big splurge - new flannel sheets for the bigger bed - to shreds, again in the morning when I was too groggy to keep up with him. But, like taking real weekends, not fake ones where I still answer emails all day, has made a difference for me and I have seen the power of making space for my spiritual/emotional needs as well. I'll be keeping this up.



Talking to Dan - more...formally? than I usually do, was powerful - agonizing, but filled with so much love. I decided, too, that I'd take out his Little (my name for his harness) and wash it -  that was very hard, as it was covered with his fur, and I didn't want to lose that - but it was also a bit stinky, and I want to keep his little pine box of special things smelling sweet, so I washed it. The pain just engulfed me the whole time, and I sang The Lost Words Blessing as I did it. ..and after I had, I saw that some of his fur had remained.
 





Yesterday and today have been strange, powerful, and I'm  just grateful I still have the strength to do some baking, some ritual, on top of all the work. Gabe is beside me and so very loving - but as I said to a friend the other day, even if I had my health suddenly back, enough money to retire, and all the world's problems were solved in a flash - I'd be deep in grief, because I have lost Dan. All the good things in my life, which I cherish, and am so deeply grateful for - do not change the reality of loss.  And that's what love is - traveling this life together, with our loved ones, and then staying connected and conscious after we lose them. Grief is powerful; and omnipresent, and complicated - it will take as long as it takes.  


                 

                  Clean harness and one of his Rabbit toys, on the wooden box filled with memories.

              Blessings and love to all of you walking this Path of Pain; my heart is with you.

 







Monday, October 25, 2021

The Things We Long to Do and Don't

 This morning I am particularly sick with sorrow, and I know why; it's autumn, my first without Danny;  I'm doing some Ancestral Work (which always takes me back to Rupert, which I never really left) and, I played that Justin Hayward song, which breaks my heart in a million pieces as it expresses my sadness and loss so eloquently.


This is the journey, I know it is. I have to live through the pain. I have to allow the jumble of emotions to coexist (Gabriel  became very excited at the sound of coyotes earlier, ran around making little grunting noises and looking so so serious, and then decided the safest place for him was to sit on my foot, as Danny always did. It was...adorable). Then for some reason the cascade of sorrow descended - I had done the dishes, tackled a bit of the email, made my morning offerings and lit the candles, and then there it was. Now that I think of it, I suspect the trigger was a sweet image one of my herbal colleagues posted, of a huge chair he had purchased, to share with his dog. He and the dog looked so happy in it.  The thing is, I had always planned to buy something like that for Dan, at the end, so he could sleep with me. So we could have a wee cuddle outside of bedtime, where he really liked to sprawl, or crawl under the covers to snuggle, which would have been a really, really bad idea with GOLPP (they must not get overheated). In my Danny Folder, I have many images like this:




..which I planned to buy for his final days. Sure,  many are expensive, but I was looking for simple comfort and hey, I spent half my income on food, supplements, vets etc anyway. 
So why didn't  I get this thing?

Or the "better Bark Box" - there is a Canadian company that includes more natural treats, I stopped the Bark Box because we never used the treats and the boys stopped caring about the squeaky toys.
I didn't get the better version, because, well, I knew he was going to die.

And I didn't get the Big Chair thing because I am always scrambling to make ends meet, I'm tired, have to fight disorganization daily (hourly) and so on.
I mean, Dan already had a ton of toys, he slept on the sofa beside me - and let's not forget, the only reason he wasn't in bed beside me at the end was, I fractured 4 vertebra and have to have a special mattress and my bed elevated WAY too high for him. If he'd jumped off he'd have surely hurt himself.

I was trying to take care of him, me, the cats, everything. While battling the pain that is called Anticipatory Grief and the insufferable misery that is called Regret.
I try to cut myself some slack and remember all the things I did do. But I'm hard wired to berate myself, find fault. It's been a lifelong battle to feel even marginally "ok", and now with the trauma of Dan's death, and my health challenges, all the old crap comes flooding back - great the way that happens, isn't it.

So I find a thousand things I wanted to do, planned to do, longed to do, but didn't. And then I have to walk myself through the reasons why - some valid and sensible, like trying to work all the time and pay for everything - others represent stuff I need to look into....some magical thinking, for example, and managing my anxiety/depression with shopping.

I look at Gabriel and think, I'm going to make sure I don't make the same mistakes.
But then I feel guilty.

Every day is a struggle. But I'm walking the walk here, trying to do it all as always, with some more grace extended to myself.
I loved Danny with all my heart and I was a pretty good Mom, even without the chair thing and the new Bark Box.

I hope the hurt eases up soon.
And that I have the strength to make the real changes I need to for this journey ahead.







Sunday, October 24, 2021

Octobers

 This is my first October in 16 years without Dan.
I brought him home in late October, 2006. Last October, 2020, marked 15 together. I feel like it was all a dream, most of the time.
Looking at our pictures help; here are a few of my faves from  Octobers through the years.







                                                            All from October 2006











                                                               October 2007


                             With Tina and me, at a St. Francis Day outing - October 2009






                                            Two profiles, in his chair, October 2010








2011, the year he was 5 and his muzzle started to turn white. Bottom pic is on a roadtrip to look at 300 acres of wild land for sale, alas no accommodation...but here we have the famous Danny Squint







                             Up at Eddie's land, one of my favorite pics of him - 2012



                        Blending in with the fall colours on one of our most beloved rambles, 2013

 

 


                                          2014, in his chair, watching me clean







                                    2016, he was 10, and very white, but still very fit, active,healthy
                                                     Our last October in Rupert





2017, in his weird harness, at the new house. He palpably disliked these woods or at least, felt ill at ease in them, but he adored walking onleash around the circle, sniffing the other dogs who had passed by. I never would have imagined.

 






                                                                          2018

                                                          How sweet he was, always....


                                     

  And that's it for Octobers - no pics from 2019 (I was unable to stand up!)   or  his last October, 2020.
                                Oh Dan. I love you and miss you so much.

Thursday, October 7, 2021

35 Weeks without you

  Today marks 35 weeks since Danny left me so abruptly, and in such soul-shattering pain. While the initial shock and extreme pain has eased, I am by no means back to any sort of normal. I am working - I have a puppy (can't bring myself to write much about him yet, but he is beautiful, loving and helps me so so much) I have 4 old, amazing cats and a tyrant of a parrot; I am surrounded by an oak forest and my herbalism/spiritual practise are strong within me. My health is both bad (fractured spine) and good (no diabetes,  no overt heart disease, all blood values good etc). I strive to be a better human, mostly every day I do (I slack off on weekends and just do self care) and I still feel a glimmer of hope for myself and, more insanely, humanity. I look forward to tv at night with my partner; I can walk Gabriel 20-30 minutes once or even twice a day now. Awaiting medical help I have a better pain management protocol in place, and I do mostly all the natural stuff - D3, K2, multi-min, herbs, olive oil, flax,  legumes and and and and and (scones, too, nobody's perfect).

Despite the troubles ahead for the world, the challenges of aging, and  deep regret over my mistakes in my fifties, I feel love, wonder, hope and even occasional joy, at the miracle of life, at the sweetness of the puppy, the incredible humour of my bird (greets me with "Hello, Psycho "- and worse - and that's just the start of the day) I am so grateful for the tenderness and wisdom of my cats, this house full of books and herbs and all the collected and loved little things of my life so far. My partner and I could not be more opposite in our ways, but we also cannot be without each other, so we have it more or less worked out (we won't talk about dog training here).

And, still, Dan's absence is everywhere "over everything like the sky" as C.S. Lewis put it.

Still, I cry every day, talk to him every day, light his candle, feel the strangeness of being without him (me and Dan and Dan and me!) and often, watching Gabriel, I go back to the first years, before Lila died and Dan and I became truly a bonded, hyper-attached pair... (2007 -8) and marvel at how much we think we know about dogs, when in fact there is always a part that is so mysterious and Other. When I remember those years - Lila's last illness and surgery and eventual death...my father's death... my opening up to herbalism in a whole new way...my embracing of solitude...I stop and look at Danny's pictures and wonder - how was all this for you? He seems happy - crazy -  full of life! and he was so well loved, cared for - fed... but his experiences, while I strive to understand them, are his own... there  are many times I catch myself, in retrospect, projecting aspects of myself onto him. When I see Gabriel these days, I keep that sense of mystery, of his Other-ness, front and centre. More on that when I am able to write about Gabe.

Still, I was never apart from Daniel, and whatever mistakes I made, whatever human arrogance made me think I knew him entirely, however much I regret certain things that last year, his sudden vanishing  and all that he and I were and did together - gone! there remains a palpable presence -  his sweet face gazing out at me from pictures - in frames, on the fridge, everywhere...the emptiness of the backyard...and the eerie aura of loss and love in the room where I keep his ashes....along with an increasing amount of  focus on my own healing, and of course, new puppy, my work and so on.
Up until fairly recently, that absence, that pain, was constant and unrelenting. It is, a little softer now, if still pervasive.

Maybe this is how it goes. I admit, after my brother died I was basically drunk for a year. I don't remember a lot. I remember after 3 months, being asked if I was "still taking it hard"....I recall the books I bought and a few very extraordinary experiences that made me feel sure John was somewhere, still, in spirit. And almost a year after John's death, I was Given the house in Rupert, which took me into the distracting chaos of a move and then...all the transformations and experiences that followed.

John is still with me, always but in such a less acute way....the pain is there, but I have learned to live with his absence, as much as anyone ever does. Perhaps that will be how Danny and will I shift too, from an omnipresent pain (I no longer drink, so nothing is ever buried) to a powerful presence of grace beside me; his spiritual presence, bringing growth and love, as he did in his physical being. Right now, the pain is forefront, as is the remorse, but I am trying to focus on the mistakes I feel I made and rectify them - so that this pain will translate to something meaningful, lasting.

And today, as always on Thursdays, I am feeling it deeply, reliving that morning, and thinking of the  beautiful Gift that I had all those years, how much he gave me in life and left me with - and feeling gratitude through the tears.

This image seems to capture what I think of as Dan's Otherness - his Mystery, that same mystery all creatures embody, even as they live with and love us, even as we try to see them, and give them our love, however imperfectly...if not always exactly what it is they need the most.

I love you Danny. With all my heart - always, and forever.







Saturday, September 25, 2021

2007 Part Two

 Just a few more images from 2007, the first year I had my Baby Danny.

I find myself going back to Dan's first year, all the time, and comparing, where I was at then, as well as the two puppies - I was strong and able bodied and we walked everywhere, I can't do that with Gabe. I was also very messed up emotionally on a few counts and I am vastly more stable, grounded, mature now.

Gabe is a typical puppy and wants to chase cats, dig the garden, destroy everything in his path, and he's a typical RR in that he has selective hearing for coming when called. Dan was a  pretty easy puppy in those areas - on counter surfing, and his long walks (probably too long for his age, I know better now) made him more tired. He wasn't a counter surfer or a digger and his recall was astounding -  but he was batshit crazy at times and worried me endlessly.

Dan had intermittent colitis from 5 months old and I had to feed so much to keep his weight up I worried he would bloat.
Gabe has good poops unless he scores cat food and he seems to gain weight quickly, so I am concerned the calorie limitation is not providing enough micronutrient for growth.

I had virtually no money in 2007 and I have some now, but I also felt so much hope and energy then whereas I fight for every drop of positivity I can muster these days.

Dan and I were wild and free, Gabriel and I live with much restriction.

But love is love is love.


In the Dan years I experienced massive spiritual growth , that was my main focus in life - and I humbly submit I have attained a fair bit in that regard.
The years ahead, should I be granted them, have to focus more on material healing, my work, my back, my finances. And to do so without losing the lessons from the Dan years, so sacred and precious to me, as he was and is.

I struggle with such disorientation, how the Dan years flew by, as though it was all a dream. I did try to make every moment count, but still, I blinked and it's all over. I struggle with Dan's death, I go through phases - one day I am comforted by the many images of him around the house, the next I am haunted, I cannot bear to look at them.  Sometimes I feel guilty that I love Gabriel, and sometimes I feel guilty (towards Gabriel) that the love I bear Danny is still so heavy in my soul. It's all difficult, but  I know it is  a process, and when autumn arrives, as it has now, I remind myself I had 15 autumns with Dan and this is the first without him.

That I lived with Dan as my constant companion for 5,216 days - and have lived with Gabe for 89.

So I celebrate the past, I explore the Mystery of it's passing, I continue to practise gratitude for what was, and what is, while striving hard to shape what will be - including the lessons and growth of the Dan years, into a time ahead of balance and peace.
Right now, the pain is still so raw and merciless...but Gabriel is a very strong antidote to the despair that often comes with it.


Fall of 2007




A serious face at the back door...


The famous Danny squint, after Lila scored his treat...



Sweetness..



Dan with his brother Brody (on the left)




 Art by Dan. He really didn't destroy a lot, but he had a real vendetta against this watering can....