Love lost

A most beautiful conclusion to this reflection on animals and love.

Yesterday, I took a personal journey through the subject of love.  I closed that post by saying, “So let me close this essay by asking you to come back here and read the guest post tomorrow from author Eleanore MacDonald, where Eleanore  writes of the loss of their dog Djuna.  You will read the most precious and heart-rending words about love.

So an enormous thank-you for being granted permission to republish the tribute Eleanore MacDonald wrote upon the loss of their dear dog Djuna.  I guarantee you will need a handkerchief or tissue close to hand!

oooOOOooo

one of the seven great dogs

“Until one has loved an animal, a part of one’s soul remains unawakened.”
Anatole France

Djuna Cupcake, my heart of hearts,
photo by Breelyn MacDonald

A great squall came upon us here on our farmlet a week ago. I saw it first from a distance, in that dawning of the morning when Djuna usually announced the coming day with his gentle, breathy ‘woooof’, his polite plea to join us on the bed. Mysteriously disturbing, it surely was a sign of things to come, but we didn’t know how dangerous it really was until it was upon us.

And when it was suddenly there, a Great Joy was sucked from our world and an overwhelming sadness took its place … a raging stillness, hot and stifling, no breath, no heartbeat.

My springs of Joy are dry …  (a sentiment stolen in part from that great old song, Long Time Traveler)

Djuna Cupcake was one of the Seven Great Dogs.  If you’ve seen the film ‘Dean Spanley’, you will know what I mean. If you have loved and been loved by a dog of pure heart … one who was a great teacher of presence, of patience, one who was the dispenser of unconditional love and the blessings of an incomparable joy … one who was a great listener, guardian, and the embodiment of Buddha, Coyote, the Goddesses Eleos and Kuan Yin all in one soft coated body … one who was your loving shadow because he or she felt that it was their job to see you safe at all times … you will know what I mean.

He died quite suddenly. Like that squall, his death came with no warning and for days after Paul and I were sucked deep into that great black hole of grief. The dread attacked us at every turn, where we would always see him but now only a glaring emptiness stood. I felt as though my heart and soul had a raw, oozing, gaping, searingly painful wound where he had been torn away from me.  Stolen.  We cried a lot.

Some people will never understand.  I try to feel compassion for them, rather than issuing the big ‘EFF YOU”, but I am only human. What is this BS about a ‘three day’ rule? What? Because he was ‘just a dog’ we should be over it all in 3 days?  Djuna was surely a better person than most Humans and I will never stop missing him. I feel so deeply sorry for those people who have overlooked having such grace and beauty bless their lives –– the companionship of a great dog (or cat or horse, or human person) –– so that, when the monumental end comes and they’ve come through the great fires of sorrow, and have been washed by the flush of a million tears, they come through to the other side where they are able to see the remarkable love, joys and lessons they’d been gifted by that companionship. I can only hope now to ‘be’ the person Djuna thought me to be.

3 days and 3 more and 3 million more and even then more just won’t do it.

Paul and I were with Djuna on our bedroom floor when he died. I lay with him next to my heart, whispering love, my arm draped over his neck …  and as he was leaving us, I saw him standing just beyond Paul. Alert, ears akimbo, head cocked, eyes bright, a wad of socks in mouth, standing in his particularly great exuberance, as he did each morning when the time for chores presented itself – “Come on! It’s time to go! Get with it you silly humans! There’s work to be done, there’s a barn to clean and a day to sniff, there’s delight to be found!”  And then he left.

My ‘joyometer’, my daily dispenser of mirth, and my constant reminder of the importance of presence, has gone missing – his lessons of ‘Be Here Now’ measured in doses of  ’Oh, sense the beauty in the music of the wind!’, ‘Let’s just run in circles and laugh’, ‘I love, love, love you!’ … gone. It is wholly up to me now to remember to stay in each moment, to just be a nice person, cry whenever I must, to laugh as much as possible and dance for the sheer joy of it.  And when the cacophony of the deafening silence has quieted and the colors of sorrow have muted and gone transparent and I’ve had some time to let the Aegean clean up those bloodied wounds in my heart and soul, there will be room again here for another one of the Seven Great Dogs.  And the cycles will continue on.

Almost every evening Djuna and I took an evening stroll down our quiet lane. I loved watching him dance his great joy, nose to the ground scenting all of the news of the day or nose to the sky, sensing what was coming on the breeze. On our walks I watched the seasons change, the rising of the full moon, the greening of the new spring and the evening skies, like snowflakes, no one ever alike … I watched the Canadian geese come and go, the Red Tail hawks courting in the air above me, and let the build up of my day fall away as I tread softly with my gentle friend. It took me several days after Djuna’s death for me to realize that here was yet again another gift he had left for me in his wake, and one I should continue to enjoy. The sky was black to the West, we’d had heavy winds and rain all day, but when there was a break I set off on ‘our’ walk. Wrapped tightly in sadness and hardly breathing with the missing of him, I shuffled along about a 1/2 mile and turned for home before the rains started up and the chill wind began to blow, fierce again, from the south. That wind battered and bashed me until it freed the tears from my eyes, and the freezing rain lashed my face until I grew numb. As though suddenly realizing I was about to drown, I surfaced, taking in great gulps of air as though I’d not been breathing for several days, and began to climb free of the suffocating bonds of my sadness.

Part of our family

My Djuna, my Cupcake … My Heart of Hearts who knew my soul, my every thought; great lover of Paul and I, and of Breelyn; great lover of his mare and his pony, of socks and his furry toys and his GWBush chew doll; great lover of his evening walkies and of riding in the car, and feeding the birds; great lover of sofa naps and sleeping in late with us on the bed and chasing BALL and rolling on the grass and of eating horse poop; bountiful bestower of stealthy kisses; joyful jokester, Greek scholar (he knew about 15 words and understood several phrases spoken to him in Greek; something we did only after he’d begun to understand words and phrases *spelled out* in English! ‘Car’, ‘dinner?’, ‘play with the ball?’, ‘feed the birds’, water, pony, get the goat, etc!); Djuna, beloved Honorary Cat, our timekeeper, our guardian angel, our boss, our playfully dignified friend (thanks for that Marija) and family member, and one of the Seven Great Dogs – we will love and miss you forever.

But now – there’s work to be done, there’s a barn to clean and a new day to sniff, there’s delight to be found!

love – photo by Breelyn MacDonald

Copyright (c) 2012 Eleanore MacDonald

oooOOOooo

When I originally read this, I left a comment, “Achingly beautiful words. One of the most precious pieces of prose about a dog that I can ever remember reading.”  Few will disagree!

As I replied in a recent email to Pat Shipman in response to Eleanore’s words above, “That really does endorse the proposition that, in a very real sense, our humanity is the product of our ancient relationship with animals.

Dear Eleanore, thank you so much for allowing me to republish your beautiful thoughts.

9 thoughts on “Love lost

  1. Thank you so much for sharing this, Paul. Djuna’s ‘missing’ from our lives still leaves such a deep hole, but I find it interesting that, as you re-publish this, we are readying to invite a new, lovely dog into our lives and hearts … I have NEVER – in my life – been dog-less, so I’ve felt a bit adrift upon an unknown sea for the last six months. I do not like being dog-less, but I think there has been a great deal to assimilate before being ready to begin learning from, and “loving with”, another. We need that particular joy here again! I do hope folks reading this, and liking it, might find their way to my blog, Notes From an Endless Sea, where they will find more pieces about our dear Djuna – in happier times! … the old goats … the horses … my Grecian Muse and the stray animals of Greece (many are my wards when I visit each year) whom I’ve just written my first novel about. They all fill me, teach me, make me laugh until my stomach hurts and I simply find them to be better people than most humans-and for their companionship I am ever grateful. But dogs … yes, there’s something very, very special about dogs … thank you again. Eleanore

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    1. Although I have a Kindle, I’m still rather old-fashioned in my reading habits and prefer the paper book. But your words above and the fact that you have a novel e-published give me no choice; I will be downloading All The Little Graces before the end of the week. Well done!

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      1. Thank you Paul! ‘Graces’ is available in paperback! There is a link on the book’s page at my blog that goes to ‘Createspace’, where you will find it as a ‘real’ book. It’s at Amazon too. I, too, am old fashioned. But I must admit, my Kindle travels with me and keeps my back from going out from carrying the requisite many lbs. of books with me!

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  2. Paul tears are still streaming and dripping off my chin, so you know how this touched my heart… and Im so pleased I left off reading until this morning, as Im alone and can cry to my hearts content…

    Until you have loved and lost a dear friend of the four-legged variety and grieved at the Vacuum of space that they have left behind, as you wander from room to room as you expect to see their presence.. You have never fully experienced Love in all its forms..

    Our Animal Kingdom especially those whom we have in our homes give us unconditional love.. Oh that the world could hold its head up to the world LOVE. And Love as our dearly beloved pets love us…

    Thank you for this wonderful entry.. ~Sue

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    1. Sue, it’s 5.50am. I’ve just let our ‘bedroom’ dogs out and settled back in bed and opened up my laptop. Jean has just taken little Sweeny out who never comes out with the bigger dogs first thing in the morning. (Sorry, all seems like insane triviality!)

      Maybe this preamble shows how inadequate I feel in responding properly to you sharing such personal feelings.

      But here’s what does come to mind. That is that maybe, just maybe, the opportunity for so many people, who only know each other virtually, to share their pains and joys across this interconnected world, heralds an openness and honesty that is changing global society. Creating a tide of awareness that saves humanity from the impending madness of destroying this beautiful planet.

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      1. Paul your words weave a picture of a beautiful morning where both you and Jean and your beautiful four-legged begin your day..

        I would hope Paul that sharing such emotions across this virtual world we call reality, can indeed shape the reality to come.. One where we can show our Love and Compassion and kindnesses more.. One where we are unafraid of ridicule of being too soft, One where Selflessness becomes second nature like our pets show us in their loyalties and unconditional outpourings we take for granted from them..

        I hope Paul that this world Learns Much From Dogs and Cats and ALL of our Animal world.. For we as Human Beings have still so much to learn from them..

        Bless you and Jean for the Love you share with your four-legged, two legged etc.. But also Bless you for sharing it with your blogging community..
        Sue

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