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Featuring Demian Dressler, DVM and Sue Ettinger, DVM, Dip. ACVIM (Oncology), authors of The Dog Cancer Survival Guide

Reflections Four Days After Departure

Updated: August 27th, 2019

This post will be a little different.

I put my own dear Ginsu down four nights ago due to cancer.  Ginsu was a loved cat, not the usual subject of the Dog Cancer Blog. Yet loss is loss, and as a provider of information that sometimes involves coping with loss, I would like to give you some reflections that might help you, when  forced to deal with loss of a loved one.  I’ve always found the best wisdom comes from the trenches, after all.

Ginsu, thankfully, beat the odds, and hung on long after a textbook might have suggested.  But his passing was no less brutal, and the brutality of death is something worth mentioning.  For a lucky few, the passage of someone in your heart can represent something beautiful.  Yet for most, its finality can be spirit-crushing, especially during the passing and for the days following.

Sure enough, just as written in the Guide, my mind was clouded and it was difficult to think and function. But I took the steps prescribed for guardians myself, and was able to get some clarity. I had to guard the guardian and experience the sadness.

I heard from a very smart man long ago that the way to move through something is by “experiencing it away”.  We have to be controlled in this, and so I’ve  took it bit by bit, stopping what I am doing for a couple of minutes to shed some tears, then moving on to what’s next. This provides the salve that helps us to function during grieving.

I saw a thought in myself during this time. There was something not okay about the whole experience.  In other words, this was something that I had not signed up for and that was simply not right, unjust.  These were what they call preconscious thoughts, not quite easy to pinpoint as they were kind of floating in the background of the mind.  But they were there, and I feel that this “wrong” sensation is common in those coping with final departure.

And when something feels wrong, the natural thing to do is to find its cause.  Next comes doing something about what’s wrong. And here is where things get a little weird (and again, I am speaking from self-observation here, so these ideas may not apply to everyone’s experience).

Inside all of the grief is this current of addressing the injustice in front of us, somehow helping to soften the wrong-ness of it all.  So I noticed myself searching for a release valve to help fix the unfair situation. In my case, it was  a little life form, my dear Ginsu, who did not deserve to have his jaw broken by an invading tumor. What in the world did he do to deserve this?  Where is the justice in it?

A few things happened from these thoughts.  One was guilt.  This as many know is common during guardian grieving. Also, anger. As I watched myself I realized that I was trying to find a release from the unfairness, and was turning it on myself (guilt) or the outside world (anger).

It seems these are connected. In other words, our pet is experiencing undeserved suffering, which feels unfair, which needs a resolution, which has no resolution, which gets turned to “someone’s gotta pay”, which travels to ourselves as guilt and outside ourselves as anger.

Once I realized this, it helped me cope with what was happening.  Some call this a “handle”, which means you identify what’s going on so you can deal with it (handle it).  A handle allows you to move at least one of your two feet out of the mess.

Once some of the feelings grew softer, all that was left was a deep sadness, just a wound. And as this did what wounds do (hurts), it dawned on me that that this is the price of the joys of life. There is a cost to life, and it is only my inappropriate feelings of entitlement that make death feel unjust.

Another way to look at it is that humans often believe we, and our loved ones, have a right to be here, like a big cash prize that we expect to be free. No repayment expected, no abrasions of life tolerated.  Yet this was my delusion, created by my own simple and silly human way of only looking at a small piece of a much larger picture.

For me, watching this simple and silly idea fall apart was the root of the guilt, anger, and even sadness.  It was not just Ginsu leaving- it was also my silly idea of what is “supposed” to be.  And I have carried this over the years, and encountered it with other guardians in my veterinary practice and life.  But for the first time I can actually see it.

I read a quite wise thing once.  It sounds a little grim but it actually is not- it can be joyful.  The short point was this:  if we live with the deliberately continued recognition that we may die at any time, it changes everything.

As I am passing through Ginsu’s departure, this is the gem I’ve gained. And I pray as the weeks, months and years travel by, that I remember this advise to myself.

By the way, a simple new tip: look at pictures and any videos.  Go do it. It helps a lot through the whole thing.

Best,

Dr D

 

 

 

 

Leave a Comment





  1. Kathy Chiavola on August 9, 2012 at 3:17 pm

    Thank you for your post and my heart goes out to you in your loss. My only consolation is that I believe I will meet with my loved ones, animal and human, in heaven.
    Peace and God bless,
    Kathy

  2. Deb on August 9, 2012 at 2:28 pm

    Dr. Dressler,
    I am so sorry for the loss of your beloved kitty, Ginsu. Your comment about the unfairness of it all resonated with me as I’ve been thinking exactly that. My 10 year old Jack Russell/Chihuahua mix, Sobaka, has been diagnosed with anal sac adenocarcinoma with mets to the lymph nodes. He is not a candidate for surgery as the lymph nodes are too close to the major arteries. He is such a happy boy, we’d never have known he was sick if I hadn’t asked the vet to express his anal glands when I took him to have his teeth cleaned. Your book has given me hope though, and a sense that I can do something to help him. I don’t know how long I will have him with me, but I will cherish every day. My thoughts and prayers are with you and your family, and with dear Ginsu. I know he’ll be waiting for you when your time comes, as Sobaka will surely be waiting for me.
    God bless you,
    Deb

  3. JJ on August 9, 2012 at 1:58 pm

    Thank You for the post. And Sorry for Your Loss.

    Life is about having the experience. And the best best way is to fully experience whatever that emotion is…… so you can let go of the sadness and hold on to the joy your pet brought into your life.

    Thank you for sharing all the gifts of wisdom. As my dog as of August 29 will be tumor free for one year.

    God Bless ,,,,
    JJ

  4. Dagmar on August 9, 2012 at 1:54 pm

    I also can relate so much to what you are saying (lost 2 beautiful dogs within only a few months) and I feel truly so sorry for your loss!
    As you said, looking at pictures is one way to deal with it.
    What helped me and my husband extremely was the Emergency Essence of the Australian Bush Flower Essences. You are still grieving, but it takes the edge off it.

    Dagmar

  5. Celia Bucio on August 9, 2012 at 1:51 pm

    Dr.D Thanks for the post, you’ve described exactly what my feelings are. I lost two weeks ago My lovely Myla a Jack Rusell Terrier 11 yrs , metastic lung cancer.. I spent this two weeks going through the photos and memories….. grieving with my other two dogs and coping with our sadeness. She gave me a lesson, live everyday as if it is the last one and try to make each day the best as my lovely Myla did. She was so brave. Im very thankful ’cause of your dog cancer survival guide she lives better her last two months.
    My heart goes out to you and Ginsu.

  6. Laurie on August 9, 2012 at 1:32 pm

    Thank you for sharing your emotions over your grief from saying goodbye to your beloved cat, Ginsu. The love we feel for our pets is so pure–not blended with any conflicting emotions like we may have over the loss of people near to us. Animals are like little children and they are so innocent and dependent on us. I’ve been through this very sad experience a number of times and it is just so very sad each time…

  7. Nanette on August 9, 2012 at 1:13 pm

    Dr. D., I am so sorry for your loss. I understand your grief. I helped my sweet Cocker, Toby, cross over to the Rainbow Bridge, just last Friday night. He was diagnosed with Lymphoma October 2011, so we had an amazing extra 8 months with him. But this fact does not erase the ache in my heart from missing him.

    I hope and pray you are comforted by the fact that you did your very best to make Ginsu’s life wonderful, and extended his life beyond the limits of the clinical norms. And he, most likely, knew that and was grateful.

  8. Allison on August 9, 2012 at 1:04 pm

    Thank you so much for this beautiful post. There is so much I would like to say but what really matters as you put it so perfectly is to live deliberately as if everything may change. Ginsu was such a special and unique soul and I know he lived his life in a very deliberate and in the moment manner. This is how I will remember him and I thank him for the space he created in me to open myself up to unconditionally love such a special being. I miss you my fiery, sweet and loving friend. What a blessing you are to my life.

  9. Melissa on August 9, 2012 at 12:46 pm

    Thank you.
    My 15 year old cat with cerebellar hypoplasia died recently, just after my wife died of lymphoma. I have read a great deal since then. I listen much.

    Your piece was exceptionally touching and helpful. I will pass your wisdom on.

    I am sorry for your loss.

  10. Jesse Brown on August 9, 2012 at 12:45 pm

    Thank You, Well spoken.

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