![]() |
![]() |
![]()
Post
#1
|
|
Group: Pet Lovers Posts: 22 Joined: 20-October 08 From: Miami, FL Member No.: 5,153 ![]() |
Hi....
I can hardly believe I'm writing these words-- our sweet little dog Yogi was struck and killed by a speeding driver yesterday afternoon. She was an eleven year old Italian Greyhound, very vibrant and loving. My husband took her out front to chase the ball-- her favorite thing in the world. Usually she was pretty sensible and stayed on the lawn but for some unknowable reason, yesterday she stepped into the street --at the exact moment this car seemed to materialize from nowhere. If it hadn't been speeding it wouldn't have hit her-- she was practically standing still. I was inside in my office at home and heard the whole thing happen-- my husband yelling, the impact, all of it. She was killed pretty instantly-- I'm grateful that she didn't suffer. I did scream once at the driver who was crouched by her body-- I couldn't help myself, I screamed with all my might, You killed my dog. At least he didn't hit and run. My husband told him he shouldn't be speeding and that he better scram. I felt like my whole body was shaking apart. I went and stood by her broken body until we could move her, to make sure no other cars hit her. We don't have children, though I'm not even sure if that really matters, but we adored Yogi. We had her for almost eleven years, since she was six weeks old. Her little muzzle was turning white but she was still completely joyous, vibrant and puppylike. She had one fang that kind of tilted out, so we called her Snagglepuss. She had this way of shivering and giving people "kisses" by wrapping her forepaws around your head and pressing her chest against your face. She loved all sorts of people--even crazy people and scary people that you kind of wished she didn't love so much ;-) I guess all pet-lovers must think this, but what a magical quality she had --it was uniquely her own and I'm crushed, knowing there will never ever be another one like her. They're just like people, aren't they? Each one so unique. Maybe it's human nature to feel like if we love something so much that somehow it magically protects them, that nothing will ever happen to them. It's such so hard to believe or take in. I don't know. I feel so stupid and lost and like something has torn my heart right out of my chest. It's 2:30 in the afternoon as I write this. I can barely eat. All I seem to do is leak tears and stare. I keep thinking I see her. I keep imagining I heard her little toenails tapping on the floor. She loved to watch us from her beds as we worked. What do you do? How do you not die from grief? I'm sorry, I don't mean to sound grand or melodramatic, I just really mean it. How do you get through the day after they die?
Attached image(s)
![]() |
|
|
![]() |
![]()
Post
#2
|
|
Group: Pet Lovers Posts: 22 Joined: 20-October 08 From: Miami, FL Member No.: 5,153 ![]() |
Steve and Beth,
Thank you for your encouragement. Grief is awfully sneaky, I guess. Today I had some quiet spells where I thought I was finally somehow getting "better" but then I would have a total melt-down. I feel so fragile, like I can't bear even the slightest unkindness in the world. I've even lost interest in the election-- my neighbors have been fighting and I just want them to see how much we need each other, how important it is to be kind to each other. So many hard moments-- the first time I came back in the door today and Yogi wasn't there to greet me; missing our morning walk; seeing her empty bed; realizing I still sit a certain way on the couch because I need to leave room for her. Ouch, ouch, ouch.... I've been putting seashells on her little grave and talking to her every morning and evening. Thank you, friends. Diana |
|
|
![]() ![]() |
Lo-Fi Version | Time is now: 22nd June 2025 - 11:24 AM |