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Showing posts with label American Bully. Show all posts
Showing posts with label American Bully. Show all posts

Monday, August 8, 2022

i miss my dead dog ... so what am i?

I fucking miss my dog. I miss him so much, my packmate, Buddy Guillermosson. And the thing is I know, I know he's having a good time, eating better than I am, hanging with all the ladydogs, grateful to have his strength back after the cancer, tearing arse across Fólkvangr, probably tussling with boars, defending against lone wolves, and stopping to smell all the flowers that don't even grow here. I know it in my heart, and I know that I will be with him again someday, and just like me coming home, he'll be the first to greet me, and I'll kneel down, putting his paws on top of my shoulders, and we'll hug like we used to every day after work, and we'll smile, and feel that inimitable sense of relief that no matter what, we'll have each other.

But right now, I don't have that. I have loss, and heart-wrenching grief that attacks me everyday, unexpectedly, in a sort of double-edged mercy that bleeds my eyes of tears and scrapes my insides of their seemingly endless blue wells of sorrow.

They gave me the three days off work for bereavement right after it happened, but I knew it wasn't enough. I suspect at least a month just to adjust would've been better, and now I totally get why the funeral-centric Victorians would just check out for a year after someone passed.

Buddy died in the kitchen, me laying sideways on the floor with him, looking him in the eyes, my hands holding his front paws. He'd stopped eating only the day before. I'd called the vet the next morning to make the appointment to take him in to put him to sleep the next day, droppering a bunch of palliative oil in his mouth until he wouldn't take anymore just to make him comfortable. Then I thought, wait, medicine's not the last taste I'd want in my mouth before I go, and I grabbed a little slice of cheese and a pulling of pork, and I just rubbed those around his mouth and over his tongue so that would be it, those two final flavours. Maybe half an hour after that, he spasmed, and jerked, and spasmed, and paused, and quickly twitched, and exhaled, and his eyes went from looking at me to looking so far past and beyond me that I realized he was beholding the road he was going to take into the afterworlds. And then this friend, this more than friend, this companion, the thing that had been the most forgiving of who I was, and loving of what I am, and consistently loyal to me beyond anyone in my life, was gone.

Picking up Buddy's box of cremains a few days later, it was like he'd returned in a sense. There was a comfort in it, having the presence of it, it suddenly filled the newfound absence in its way. And of course it's not the same -- it's displaced, it's passive. I still talk to the box of my dog's lich of ashes. I speak to him, I sing it sweet nothings, I ask it questions, but in my heart's eye I summon his reactions to all those things, those rituals of communication, and that way those reactions play back to me, echoing forward into the now, séanced from beyond. I place the box on my left upper chest before I go to bed and it's just as if his boxy 20-pound bully head is resting in the crook of my shoulder, that priceless thing that would happen before we went to sleep, which it physically is because that dog's head is in that very box.

I still hear him moving around the house. I hear the dogtags clinking in the hall, or in the backyard. I hear him step up into the creaking frame as a hey-it's-late sign that I should go to bed, I hear a chuf, that breath of a dog who is waiting to be fed.

For six years, those sounds were the ticking of my domestic clock, that clicking of his toenails on the livingroom's stained concrete just as much delineating the patterns of our shared life together, chasing me around the couch, drifting that S-turn into the hall, running circles after me in and out of the kitchen doors, being startled when he caught up to me, lunging at each other on the back porch, quickly collapsing into his panting exhaustion and my laughter at his exertions.

But my mind is still reeling, stumbling in some now awful space without his pro-action to mark that time, to reciprocate attention, to give me a reason to go walk, or do the hundred cyclical rituals that dogs compel us to do for care & love. Without Buddy, I'm no longer a master, owner, dog-dad, packmate, and that's also what really troubles me, because we need words to define us and give us roles and more importantly help us relate to each other. Those terms have been removed, and left a terminological void, because I don't know what I am now, I only know I'm no longer what I was.

Socially/societally there's words for other human loss dynamics like widow/widower, orphan, the recently adopted Sanskrit loan word for someone who has lost a child, "vilomah". I would think that a process so widespread as the death of a pet would've generated a handle for it, something to encapsulate that loss and give people not only a term towards situational acceptance & self-understanding, but as a communicative signifier to others that, hey, that guy's going through a really sad thing and to give them the room & consideration they probably need in the wake of that.

I'm in the in the wake of that, and more honestly, the fucking undertow of that. And what I need is a handle, a word to use for this specific more-than-terrible dog-loss, dog-mourning, post-dog rending of life to grab on to. The lack of this word is also so fucked up because many people seem to discount that loss as something less-than when its not. I realized my dog's love was quite probably the most pure and near to unconditional love I'd ever experienced, and the absence of that word only reflects a shortcoming of how people regard dogs as mere accessories or living adornments, when they're cognitively smart as 3-year-olds, and perhaps even more emotionally intelligent, and certainly far more empathic than they are. I mean, fuck, my dog actually spoke, so, yeah, exceptionally so.

I've recently asked people in my life who're animal-centric or for at least a time actually worked professionally with animals if they'd ever heard of some intracultural word that puts that grief into a proper label, and while they especially understand and have endured my loss many times over in their relationship with dear animal companions, they still don't have a word for me as a mourner in the shadow of that loss, and that only adds to my personal despair and the fucking awful aching that I'm just barely able to endure every night over the past month.

Fuck all.

And, as a writer, I'm going to coin a word that will hold me, that will define what this is, not only for myself, but for the first man who lost his canid outside of his cave to predators, for the blind who never get to see their guide dogs but whose dogs bear their lives visual witness with love, for the children who find their beloved friend flattened by uncaring cars in front of their very houses, for all the open-hearted who rescue older dogs made to fight and can never be re-socialized and so only have those especially willing owners, for those who prematurely lose their animals to parvo or lyme or lupus or cancer, for those who have their dogs stolen or others who through no fault of their own have lost their animals, for you who are sad and grieving and miss your friend and find it oh so very hard to now to take that dogwalk alone. I feel you. I feel all of you.

This word is for you, for us.

I miss my dog, Buddy Guillermosson.


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By day, Guillermo Maytorena IV is a happy bookstore fixture, but at night he's an Investigative Norse Mythologist! He's also willing to entertain the idea of being an adult film star, gynobot tester, or a tour guide in Scandinavia. Should you have any interest in his expertise or opportunities in those arenas, do contact him.

Monday, August 30, 2021

my dog has terminal cancer: in praise of Buddy Guillermosson.


In the wake of my separation, the thing that got me out of bed was my dog, my American Bully, my Buddy Guillermosson. Sure, I could lay in bed and not bother, but then where would the dog food come from? I would wake, I would see his 70 pounds of affirmative majesty just raring to go, and I would drag myself up, pet him, put on his collar, and he'd follow me to the kitchen and I'd let him out to do backyard business while I undraugr'd with a cup of coffee. Before I left for work I'd fill the treat ball, and before putting it down on the floor I'd say:

"Guard the house. Take no guff. Don't let anybody in. See you after work. I love you."



And I'd lock the door and go earn those sacks of dog food at my day job, hit that food warehouse after work, and carry that fuckton bag of kibble through the door to my grateful dog when I got home to the sound of his paws dancing on floor, his broader-than-human smile, and his soulful brown eyes that said:

 "Thank you. Thank you for doing that for me. I've kept our house safe. I took no guff. Nobody got in. And I love you, too."

And that dutiful exchange kept me alive. Buddy kept me alive during my separation, and through the incalculable loss of my father, and through my heartbreaks. It's been six years of being with him of his approximately decade-long life.

This week on Monday, Buddy threw up his dinner. Tuesday he hacked up some blood. Wednesday more blood occurred. Thursday I called the vet to get an appointment the next day, but no blood, so I almost cancelled, but I just wanted to be sure. And Friday the vet takes chest x-rays to discover a 2" tumor in my dog's right lung, and tells me that gives him a 6-8 month timeline, perhaps more, perhaps less if quality of life takes a sudden dive when his lungs fill with liquid to impair his breathing or he decides not to eat.

[The blood.]


I. Hate. Loss. And circumstantial/unwanted change. I hate it. I've never handled it well. After my last cat died, I told myself that I was done with pets until they solve the problem of death. But my future-then-wife moved three dogs into the house, among whom I found Buddy a far & away favourite. Buddy's white blaze on dark gray shorthaired coat, boxy head, wide-set bully frame, big paws, and alpha confidence was the clear winner. The bat-like over-cropped ears spoke of a past where he was beginning to be trained to dogfight, which means they start out by training them to kill small dogs so they get a taste for blood & death. Buddy escaped that fate, and this potentially $4,000 American Bully Classic was bought from the rescue shelter for $50. The anti-social behaviour of being game to fight had already been hardwired into him, which was his only flaw. He loved people & children, but when another dog got in his line of sight he'd suddenly rear up and become this embarrassingly savage monster that needed serious restraining. Some days I secretly loved that berserker flaw, other days I had to immediately leave wherever I was very red-in-the-face, depending.



[Buddy totally flips out on the guy trying to return my lost luggage!]

Buddy's brutal hólmgangr history was what it was, and there would be many nights where he would bark & growl & whine in his sleep, probably still remembering the martial past of his dark puppyhood years later. I would whisper to my sleeping dog, "Hey boy, it's okay. That's over. You're done with it, and you're with me now. You're safe with me." And many times the bad dream would stop at that comforting.

There was a bad moment where I found a precious pair of boots had been damaged by him, and I was mad at him for a good three days until I got the repaired shoes back from the leatherworker. I sat him down and talked to him about my feelings and respecting my things, and he looked at me knowingly, and I really felt better after I'd done that. My then-wife criticized me for bothering to do that, which really spoke more about her emotional shortcomings than it did about my need to process & make peace with the incident by monologuing with Buddy, and coming to accept that dogs will be dogs, no matter how intelligent they are. Though otherwise to her merit, she did once loudly & definitely declare, "Why would anyone have a baby, when they could have a puppy?!?", which was probably a Buddy-inspired comment.

[Buddy's a sidesitter.]

The running assignation was that since Buddy was the smartest of the pack that he was a doctor, or "dog-ter". (His two girlfriend dogs were then dubbed his nurse and medical coder, which still was all about him.)

[because glasses denote intelligence.]

Yet his smartness & exceptionality wasn't just our labelling him as a PhD: I discovered Buddy could speak. He was never a very verbal dog, maybe barking only when suspicious strangers crept up the driveway or dared to place a foot on the porch steps. Then one winter's night in the bedroom (for he was the one dog that got the privilege of first sleeping in the bedroom, then actually slowly but surely testing his boundaries and sympathetically wearing us down to sleep in the bed), I heard someone say, "Cold. Chilly. Chilly." That voice was not my sleeping then-wife's, it was the dog sleep-talking! There were two other instances of his speaking. The second time also in his sleep he said "Oh no!" The third, during a date, my then-girlfriend had just made a statement, where he suddenly interjected, "Sure." We both paused in disbelief, looked wide-eyed at each other, then looked at him. I asked Buddy to elaborate why he agreed, but he decided not to say anything else. It felt like a slip-up, like it was a quality he wished to keep hidden. Since the first time it happened I've been patiently waiting to hear him use his words again. There were moments while he napped or slept I'd notice his mouth move in a distinctly sleep-talking fashion for minutes, but inaudibly, and I'd come up, place my ear to his mouth, and whisper to him, "Speak, boy, speak. Tell me your words, tell me your dreamworld wonders. Speak."


To fill in these long silences between & after these six precious words, and in-line with my only-child background, we would speak for him. He would issues demands for treats or second dinners, or say judgments that as a then-married couple we would never speak directly to each other, but could be effectively negotiated by the dog. Beyond playful anthropomorphizing, it was almost a form of channeling the all-too evident persona of Buddy in the room, an outward building and sounding board of expression that added to the tapestry of domestic life.

[I would sometimes take dictation from him for correspondence.]

After the divorce the two girl dogs were no longer there, so to comfort now-co-bachelor Buddy, I began singing (badly) to him a lot more, taking lyrics and displacing them with his name & species to celebrate him, coming up with a veritable K-tel album of covers like:

"Buddy Crocket: Dog of the Wild Frontier" [Disney film theme]

"(I Am) Iron Dog" [Black Sabbath] 

"My Dog Be Like (Ooh-Ahh)" [Grits from Tokyo Drift soundtrack]

"Buddy: Guardian of Hausgard" [Amon Amarth]

"Come, Come My Doggle" [Crazy Town's "Butterfly"]

"Charming Buddy" [1800s "Billy Boy" song]

"(I've Got) Big Paws" [AC/DC]

"Buddy Planes" [M.I.A.]

"Big Paws I Know You're The One" [Violent Femmes' "Add It Up"]

 "Rock Me Buddideus" [Falco]

... and many, many more.

And the lyrics would come out just as ludicrous as you'd imagine. Also there was an equal selection of nonsense songs that helped expand Buddy's already plentiful monikers to things like Bu-Fu, Booley-Fu, Lord Buddlington, Lil' Teef, Jarl Booley, Doggle-Fu, Hund Des Schloss, Bat-Ears, Drooly McFoo, Mr Gray Jeans, Sir Wagglebottoms, and many other kennings & verbal laurels.

In return, at night when alone, I would listen to the song of the heavy rise & fall of his barrel chested breathing, which would lull me to sleep, and let me know that I wasn't so alone.

And maybe Buddy was even secretly less alone. Sometimes I'd come home, the couch was in post-makeout disarray, his paws would smell like Cheetos, his breath like cigars, and it made me wonder if he'd been entertaining while I was out, because we were pretty sure he was also being studded before we got him, so dog got game.

["Hey baby girl, this sweater's made of 100% Sancho material. Pet me, but know you can't touch it just once. Double dog dare you."]

And if the ladies loved LL Cool J, they loved Buddy Guillermosson even more. Passing girls would just outright stop us on walks, begin to pet him, and ask me questions about his age, breed, background, and supercool tactical vest accessories & Norse patches. Sometimes I'd even get some collateral attention from them as well, but the dog was always the slightly more handsome of our Team Handsome (which is our official pack name). Above regular walks & parks & a few hikes, we went to craft breweries, bars, public events, private weddings, and even DJ booths & dancefloors to nightclub it just like his master. Buddy was always the hit no matter where we went, which spoke alot about him and how he holds himself.

[they loved him so much they even offered him a second Puppuccino, which they never do.]

And he even somehow won his Nana's affection (something which is tenuous even for me on some days); she never was a dog person, and she saves him scraps & buys him treats for when he visits.

[His Nana enjoys her grand-dog's company.]

While he already knew how to sit, Nana gave us a sheet of dog tricks, and we trained him at the late age of eight to roll over. He was always too smart for fetch though as he quickly saw through to the fact that I'd just throw the ball, and he'd have to do it all again for nothing.

[enjoying the sun during a road trip to Bisbee.]

I am going to lose Buddy's voice, that presence, that comfort, the company that has kept me alive during the unexpected and undeserved events of recent years. I often find myself mentally lost between actions, and I pause & ask the dog, "Hey Buddy, what was I doing?", and he responds, and I'm back on track. And I so, so, so fear the absence & silence & despair that will come when he's no longer there to answer.

[In the magic hallway at The McCoy during one of many awesome late night walks.]

Having Buddy has been a blessing in so many immeasurable ways. He's an emotional constant in a world of fluctuating judgments & evaluations, a factor of such shining worth by simply being no more or no less than what he is (well, the super-rare talking aside), a present-minded motivator, a metronome of wagging happiness to helicopter near-flight propeller-tail joy to ecstatic tap dancing, a needed example of taking rest, a fearless explorer, cataloguer & connoisseur of the olfactory, a contented & tireless gourmand, an accomplished city-wide mark-leaver, and good boy.

He is the goodest of boys, the bestest of dogs.

In these next 6-8 months of impending death I'm going to be there for him and am actually attempting to cut a day off my weekly work schedule. I'm going to double-dinner down until the salmon kibble's gone, then he's going to eat like a motherfucking jarl: cojack, yogurt, chicken, pork chops, hamburger, and steak, and maybe even at the table with me. I want to make his eyes bulge in amazement at meals, and give him twice the bully sticks, which are his favourite thing to gnaw on, since at this point the extra fat doesn't matter. I want to give him the most enjoyment and wonder before his health declines and he has to be put down. I know all of that won't be enough to thank him, and I know there will be nothing comparable to replace him when he is gone, but until that end comes we have the present and I'm going to make the most of it with him and for him.


This entry is his orðstírr, the reputation of his life skalded into word-glory for us to remember him by because he more than deserves all the praise I can set down. And I end this by saying what I always say to him when we lay down to sleep:

"I love you, Buddy Guillermosson.
Thank you for being my dog.
I love you so, I love you so,
never let you go, never let you go.
You're the bestest, bestest,
better than the restest,
better than the restest dogs,
better than the restest dogs
in the world.
In. The. World."

[In. The. World.]

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By day, Guillermo Maytorena IV is a happy bookstore fixture, but at night he's an Investigative Norse Mythologist! He's also willing to entertain the idea of being an adult film star, gynobot tester, or a tour guide in Scandinavia. Should you have any interest in his expertise or opportunities in those arenas, do contact him.

Monday, August 20, 2018

and this is why Buddy's hip-hop name is Lil' Teef.



In the musical production of domestic tracks, I re-rhyme songs to integrate his name in my completely unacceptable vocals for our mutual amusement, and at night I listen to the low sub-bass loop of his steady deep breaths that lulls me to sleep like someone singing. It's a fair trade. Still, at some point he's going to chime in and rhyme back using full words. I can see it in his eyes.

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While a mostly happy bookstore fixture for over two decades, Guillermo Maytorena IV is currently willing to entertain your serious proposals for employment as a literary/cinema critic, goth journalist, castellan, airship pilot/crewperson, investigative mythologist, or assisting in a craft brewery. Should you be connected to any of the above or equally interesting endeavours, do contact him via LinkedIn or in the comments below.