This is the work of life.

July 22, 2015 · 24 comments

AddieOnPorch_Snapseed

It was a gorgeous night — all peepers and frogs, and dry as a bone after two days hot and wet enough to melt glass — and I spent much of it sitting on our front porch with Addie, our [almost] fifteen-year-old Yellow Lab, who came to us at seven-years-old having been dumped by her people after a lifetime of churning out backyard puppies for sale. She moves slowly these days; she’s a quintessential velcro dog, attached to my hip by love and affection and the hope of additional kibble falling from the sky. On this particular night, Susan was on the train, on her way home from New York; Petey, our terrier, was on an overnight at doggie day camp to blow off some hysterical puppy steam. Addie and I sat together in the quiet, just looking; watching the sharp slant of the early evening summer sun on the garden. Older dogs do this: by their pace alone they force you to slow down, to pay attention, to lift your head to catch a brief cloud of honeysuckle and lilac passing by on the breeze.

When I got up to come into the house, Addie stood up with me and I held the storm door open for her; she waited for me to go in first, as if to say After you, but I ushered her in ahead of me. She and I are very formal that way, but she possesses both the age and the wisdom that, in my opinion, always goes first.  I picked up her bowl, gave it a quick wash and added a cup of kibble, a dollop of mashed pumpkin to keep her ancient skids greased, and two pills: a square, brown anti-inflammatory for her hips, and a natural supplement which mimics the odious Prednisone she’s had to take from time to time. I mixed everything together and she stood watching me — she knows the stirring sound and the hand motion and what comes next — as I put the bowl down. She waited, looking me square in the eye and wagging, and I did what I always do right before she eats: I kissed her on the head and told her she’s a very good girl. She won’t eat unless I do this; I have no idea where the ritual comes from — perhaps her previous owners forced her to wait dutifully before she ate, as a way to wield some sort of power over her — but I’m glad to turn the act into something joyful and loving rather than controlling, and she’s glad to receive.

Addie_Lissie

That night, after feeding Addie, I realized that I knew the exact size and shape of her pills, and that I could draw them in great detail if someone asked me to; I can tell you exactly how much pureed pumpkin attaches itself to the side of her bowl at every meal, and how it must be scrubbed out before I feed her again. I can describe the sound the kibble makes when it’s folded into the pumpkin (muffled, like pebbles on a trampoline), and the crinkle of the bag where her treats are kept. I can tell you about the face she makes after she’s eaten — the way her brown eyes change from inquisitive and hopeful to soft and loving — and that it’s exactly eight minutes from her taking a post-dinner biscuit to her hip-aching climb onto the sofa, where she spends half an hour licking a favorite pillow while she digests, keeping a watch on us for the rest of the evening until we all file down the hallway as a family, one-by-one, and get into our respective beds — humans in ours; dogs in theirs.

AddieOnCouch

I can tell you all of this in exact and mind-numbing detail, but I cannot tell you the number of scoops of coffee I put into my Chemex every morning; I cannot tell you how differently the eggs from my neighbor’s Araucana chickens feel in my hand versus the ones that come from her Rhode Island Reds; I can’t tell you how long it takes ghee to melt in my late mother-in-law’s cast iron Griswold pan set over medium heat. I can’t tell you into which pepper mill I’ve put the Tellicherry peppercorns (my favorite) and in which pinch bowl the kosher salt is sitting. I make coffee and a hard-boiled egg for breakfast almost every morning; I saute something in hot ghee nearly every day, and I salt and pepper it. Which means that somewhere along the line, I’ve stopped paying attention to the most mundane activities — the daily work — of my life.

I could claim to be busy, so very busy, because, like most of us, I am, although probably no more than you. I’m writing a lot these days, finishing a manuscript and making notes for the one that will follow it. I just returned from a glorious week in Oregon at a writer’s workshop, and the loose ends and logistics I had to organize before leaving for the west coast nearly undid me: there were Uber apps to download and car services to arrange, manuscripts to be printed out, broken printers to curse at, keys and swipe cards that were not to be lost, and passwords to be remembered for my iCloud, my cell phone, my Skype account, my email accounts, my mother’s email account, my bank account, my Twitter feed, Instagram, and Facebook.

The last thing I could tell you is how one eggshell feels compared to another, or which pepper mill is holding which peppercorn. But I can tell you what Addie’s pills look like, and the sound her food makes when it hits the bowl, the softening of her eyes when the oxytocin starts to course through her body, and the rumbling, midnight snore that comes out of her like ujjayi breath.

It’s taken Addie to show me when I’m not paying attention to the routines of my life. And how, in a world that prizes exceptionalisim — the big, the fast, the overbooking and the overextension and the hyperconnection that short-circuits our analog human brain — it is the unremarkable and the quiet that we clandestinely crave, as if it were the most dangerous, threatening thing of all.

 

 

1 Amanda July 22, 2015 at 3:42 pm

Ah. And this awareness of unawareness is just that: awareness. The rhythm and sounding in this post just took all my own manuscript writing anxieties and hushed them back down my back. May you attune your handto the unremarkable weight of eggs. Soon.

2 Karen Rush July 22, 2015 at 4:19 pm

Beautifully said. I too have an old dear dog who hugs me close. I have just retired after a long, intense career. I am suddenly slowed to Bentley’s pace. He is by my side or within his gaze. I am learning to be mindful … with his help.

3 sharon eisen July 22, 2015 at 4:56 pm

Our animal companions humble us, teach us invaluable life lessons, make us laugh, make us cry, make us so much more human and connect us to each other in surprising ways.
Thank you, again, for a thoughtful and sensitive read.

4 Ksenia @ At the Immigrant's Table July 22, 2015 at 9:09 pm

What a beautiful homage to the everyday – to your pets, who make everyday worth savouring; to your boiled eggs, which give sustenance; and to your life, which is worth, well, everything. Thank you for the reminder to pay attention to the little things.

5 Leslie July 22, 2015 at 10:28 pm

Just lovely. Posts like this are why I read your blog.
Old animals make me sad. Priveledged to have had their company for however long it was, but sad in a way that people somehow don’t move me.

6 Kim Muller July 22, 2015 at 11:19 pm

Just beautiful.

7 Nancy July 22, 2015 at 11:49 pm

I was afraid to come to the end of this post and was quite relieved that Addie was still alive when I arrived at the last sentence.

8 Elissa July 23, 2015 at 8:21 am

Absolutely not!

9 Elissa July 23, 2015 at 8:22 am

Thank you. Old animals, I think, are the best.

10 Elissa July 23, 2015 at 8:22 am

Thanks Kim!

11 Mindy July 23, 2015 at 1:12 pm

This is beautiful and very true. I have three dogs…one who is older and my dearest friend. It makes me think of what my Grandmother told me when I was pregnant with my son, right before she passed away, “It only matters who you love and how you love them.” Thank you for the lovely post.

12 Wendy read July 23, 2015 at 2:32 pm

Beautifully said….

13 Deborah Madison July 23, 2015 at 4:05 pm

Old dogs are so noble and so dear. They are, and thank you for this beautiful post. Our old dog, Pasqual, also slowed us down as she slowed down. But Dante? The maniacal still puppyish Labradoodle at four years old? Just last night I was so inspired by his crazy energy (“It’s a lawn and I”m going to race around it forever!”). At this point, I wish that we could even things out a bit.

14 Elissa July 23, 2015 at 5:04 pm

He’ll calm down eventually. When he’s 12….. x

15 Monica Rabin July 29, 2015 at 8:40 pm

Michael saw this and sent it to me — just love it. So well said. It’s good to be reminded to slow down and what better way than a sweet pup.

16 Elissa July 29, 2015 at 8:53 pm

Thank you both! X

17 Zabby August 11, 2015 at 8:52 pm

Such a lovely post. Those of us who have or have had old dogs know this (bitter)sweet stage of their life. So trained, the both of us, and the human so willing to slow down to the elder dog’s pace and enjoy those many, quiet moments.

18 Mary August 16, 2015 at 3:15 pm

Beautiful written testament to taking it easy and steeping in the goodness of our lives.

19 Danielle August 23, 2015 at 9:43 pm

Hi, this is my first time visiting the website courtesy of Deborah Madison’s “vegetable literacy.” My eyes welled up reading about your yellow lab. I grew up w/ labs and my parents currently own 2 and I never thought someone could love their labs the way my family does, but your post proves that you can put that love into words and make it profoundly relatable. Thank you so much!

20 lynn August 25, 2015 at 2:21 pm

Oh how this amazing story of days in your dogs life and the incredible rewards of dog ownership resonates in my experiences with my dog. We too have a similar tradition of a kiss on the snout or head before meal time. I know her moods, she knows mine. We settle into routines which keep us both steady and balance. Every once in a while she throws me a curveball upsetting my routines with her but then I think she does so as a reminder that 2 can play this game. Here’s and cheers to dogs as companions!

21 Jane August 31, 2015 at 2:16 am

Wonderfully descriptive. Loving animal families help life. Will have more language to love my dogs with now.

22 Aed September 5, 2015 at 8:40 pm

beautiful post. First time to your site; what a pleasure. I love how your attention to your dog shows you you have stopped attending to yourself. It’s very gentle.

23 Nina November 4, 2015 at 1:01 pm

Lovely article! Photo is great, too!

24 Elissa November 4, 2015 at 1:02 pm

Thank you!

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