There are so many paths that I have taken on which I
have observed what I conclude to be magic at the
core. I’m going to re-tell a story in which I
hadn’t realized all of the magic involved when I told
it the first time.
It began in
2008, when I was buying a home in Sacramento,
CA. As a single woman, I wanted a larger
dog for protection. I hadn’t had a dog
since my beloved Magnum had passed away about
three years before.
So when I
found a rescue dog who immediately took to me
like we’d known each other forever, I knew that
she was the one. She was a shepherd mix of
some sort, with short legs and long
hair. I adopted her and brought her into
my apartment, as I waited for escrow to close on
the house.
It didn’t.
About the
same time that I realized that I would not be
getting the house I’d planned to get, I learned
that my beautiful Katy-girl was not just fat,
but she was, in fact, very pregnant.
Despite the fact that I was living in an
apartment, I was excited about the thought of
having puppies in my life.
10 days after the vet confirmed
that she was pregnant, Katy gave birth to
seven puppies. She did her best to have
them on my bed, but I kept her in a
whelping box, and was there to catch each
pup as it made its way into this world.
Sadly, Katy’s
life before me had not been good, so only three
of the seven pups survived. I planned to
keep one, the girl, whom I named Despereaux, and
find good homes for the other two.
Assuming that their new home would want to name
them themselves, I just called them “The Chunky
Puppy,” and “The Other Puppy.”
As time to rehome them grew closer,
the panic inside me grew. I’d never had
puppies before. No one ever told me how
to not fall madly in love with them.
They were beautiful, boundless bundles of
absolute joy, and I needed that so much at
that time.
I couldn’t do it. I bought a
house in an “unsavory” part of town because I
was a single high school teacher and couldn’t
afford much, and it had a quarter acre for my
babies to live and play on. I kept them
all: Katy-Mama, and Despereaux; “The Other
Puppy” became O.P., pronounced “Opie;”
and “The Chunky Puppy” became “Chunk.”
A few years after I moved into my
house, my health took a dramatic
downturn. I lost my job, and slumped
into quite a depression. My dogs gave me
a reason to get out of bed in the
mornings. No matter how low I felt, they
were always there to kiss me and love me even
when I barely had energy to feed them.
I was finally diagnosed with an
immune deficiency disorder in 2016, and my
health improved dramatically with proper
treatment. I had also met the man of my
dreams and we moved to North Carolina for a
job offer that he couldn’t refuse. With
an immune disorder, teaching in a classroom
was no longer an option for me, so I took a
job as a book keeper at a small auto repair
shop in Raleigh
It took some time to earn health
benefits from my employer. I could not
afford the IV infusions that I require to
maintain a normal immune system. In
December of 2017, I came down with
encephalitis and had a series of
mini-strokes. I am now disabled.
My fiance’s job has changed to a
work-from-home position, so we had been
planning the move from NC to NV for several
months before Covid barged onto the
scene. NV is closer to family, so it
seemed wise to move there for my health.
My dogs are old, now. Opie
and Despereaux will be 12 years old on
December 21. Chunk, sadly, did not make
the journey from NC. I am responsible
for his death, because since the
encephalitis, stressful situations cause
memory and decision-making issues. I
left my babies in the van for a moment, and
the moment slipped away from my damaged
brain. I cannot describe the scene when
I returned to the van. My three
beautiful mutts were in serious distress and
it was my fault. Fortunately, other
people who could think were there and could
take control of the situation and get them
cooled down. We thought they would all
be ok, but though Chunk seemed to be doing all
right, he was gone within a few hours.
We left
Chunk’s remains at a vet in Nashville to be
cremated and sent to our new address.
These dogs are
the only babies I will ever raise. I am
unable to have children of my own, and at nearly
50, it’s too late to, even if I could. I
wept and cursed myself all along the road
that day and into the next.
And that’s when the magic began to
show itself.
I lay in bed
that night, trying to make the pain stop. I
thought of the pets that had preceded Chunk in
death who might be waiting to greet him at
the Rainbow Bridge. There was Katy, his
mama. There was Magnum, my first dog,
and Tootsie, my roommate and best
friend’s chihuahua who loved to steal
the tennis ball from Chunk when we all lived
together.
And then
my Beloved Papa popped into my head.
Papa had been my mother’s stepfather and the only
man to remain consistently in my life from my
birth to his death, just a few years ago. I
saw him, walking Chunk across that bridge, and I
felt joy. Papa loved me and I have no doubt
he would love my dogs just because they were
important to me.
That thought made me happy, so the next
morning, I took Opie and Despereaux to a little
dog park in the corner of the parking lot of our
hotel room. While they were sniffing and
pooping, I was texting my mom about my vision.
Papa and I had
exactly that kind of relationship. Ornery
was a good word for him, but in the best possible
way. I have no doubt that he heard me and
laughed in my ear. It was probably my first
smile since Chunk’s departure.
At our first
stop upon leaving Tennessee, we stopped at a gas
station. I went inside to get some water and
the cashier said, “I hope you have a great
trip.” I grumbled something in my heart, and
headed out the door, where I saw a picture of a
wolf just above the door handle. For some
reason, that picture took my breath away. I
thought of Chunk, and it didn’t hurt quite so
badly.
As we drove
through Wyoming, I watched the scenery go
by. I replayed the events of that morning in
my head, and began to feel the guilt and grief
washing over me again. My fiance tapped me
on the knee, and said, “Babe, look.”
On the left side of the road on a bluff,
sat a huge sculpture of the silhouette of a
wolf. I felt Chunk nudging me with his
gigantic nose the way he often did when he
wanted attention. “Ok, Buddy. I’m
listening,” I thought.
The next stop
was at another truck stop. With a
compromised immune system and in the midst of a
pandemic, I walked briskly straight to the
restroom. There in front of me was a dream
catcher displayed on the wall. Not just any
dream catcher, though.
As you can see in
this dream catcher, there are four wolves:
Katy, Magnum, Tootsie, and Chunk. This
confirmed my sense that my Chunk was reaching out to
tell me that he loves me and he’s not mad at me.
But it’s even more magical than that.
I didn’t realize it until I was speaking with my
counselor, recently, and telling her about my
vision and the dream catcher, but that eagle that
you see, there? That’s Papa.
When Papa passed, his wife asked me to
create a graphic for his memorial brochure. She
told me he had a real passion for eagles, so this
image to the right is the image she asked me to
create. Now look at that dreamcatcher I just
had to have. There’s my Papa watching over
my loves, and all of them watching over me.
I bought that dream catcher. It
connects me to real magic. It is real
magic. It is Love. God is Love. Love
is the only True Magic in the universe.
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