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When a Pet Needs to Leave

The master list of losses counts 400 potential losses that can push us into grief.  I don’t have room for stories about all of them.  But the site lacked a story about losing a pet we love, a loss too important and significant to neglect.

I knew an article would come.

Recently a woman wrote to me at the miracles book website.  She couldn’t find her cat, didn’t know what to do or what to think.  We emailed back and forth.  I told her that not knowing constitutes a loss in itself.  I mentioned that I needed an article on grieving a pet for the site.  She said she would write one.  We negotiated the business aspects.

I had the story within 24 hours.

We don’t walk in anyone’s shoes.  I can’t write about losing a beloved pet.  But the woman who wrote this story can.  I’m grateful for her courage in sharing with us.  My heart goes out to all of you who have a pet that needs to leave.

At first I planned to call it, “When a Pet Needs to Say Goodbye.” Then I realized that didn’t fit because it’s not goodbye; it’s “Until We Meet Again.”

I hope the story affects you the way it touches me, and I don’t  have a pet.

WHEN A PET NEEDS TO LEAVE

By Jennifer Kathleen Gibbons

My cat, Felix, disappeared a few days ago. I’ve searched for him and prayed to God to bring him back.  No luck.  Then Life reminded me about my first cat, Electra.

More than just a cat, Electra taught me about letting go.

In 1989, as  I approached my seventeenth birthday, my closest friend Meranda called my mother. Meranda wanted to give me a kitten for my birthday. Mom hesitated at first, but then she said yes.

“Great!” Meranda said. “Because I just picked out a kitten from the animal shelter!”

Meranda doesn’t waste time.

On my birthday, she presented me with a black and white kitten — a tuxedo cat.  Small for her age but  beautiful, I knew what  to call her. I named her Electra, for the dog in the comic strip Cathy and for the label that recorded 10,000 Maniacs and Judy Collins.

Instantly Electra walked into our lives and straight into everyone’s heart. At night she slept with either my mother or me. She liked it when we brushed her. In her ladylike way, Electra sat on my chest drooling, perfectly happy and content to be there.  Electra – so regal, so elegant. Times she reminded me of Ludwig Bemelmans’ Madeline, the subject of his classic children’s books. Most definitely, if Electra saw a tiger at the zoo, she would say “Pooh, pooh.”

She saw me through many experiences and rites of passage including my first job, my grandfather’s death, unemployment and depression. When I went to London, she stared at my  picture as if to say, “Where are you?  Where did you go?”

Electra recognized words. Food. Out. Brush. When I said, “Litter box is clean,” and then placed the box on the bathroom floor, she pranced to the box flashing a look that said, “Do you mind? I need some privacy here.”

She made friends with my father on one of his visits when she approached him and nudged his hand in a way that said, “That hand is free. You can pet me now.”

So he did.

Some months later while I talked to him on the phone, Electra started meowing loudly.  “I can’t talk now, Dad,” I said.  “Something’s upsetting Electra.”

“Put her on the phone,” Dad said, “I’ll set her straight.”

I put the phone next to Electra’s ear. “Look  here, cat,” he said,  “you get two meals a day and you have a warm place to sleep. What do you have to complain about?”

Electra stopped meowing right away.

Six years ago in 2005, the vet removed a cyst from Electra’s rectum. We called it her butt lift. She never fully recovered. The still elegant and regal Electra couldn’t jump like she used to. She took more naps. It delighted her when we moved to an old farm house and she could prowl the land. She scared mice by flinging her paw to say, “Vermin, go away. I want nothing to do with you.”

She made friends with our landlady and her ex-husband. He snuck her hot dogs and petted her all the time.

Electra had no problem finding a place in everyone’s heart.

But she spent increasing amounts of time sleeping in the sun.  She moved slowly. Her full eighteen years showed. One November day, Mom found her on the grass not moving but still alive. We got food in her, but then she headed straight for our spare room and just laid there blinking — not eating, not drinking.  Nothing.

I sat with her. Read to her. Pleaded with her.  “You can’t die. Not now.  I won’t let you,” I said. I had sprained my jaw at a spin class. The pain from that made it hurt to talk. But I had to tell her. I  couldn’t lose Electra. I wouldn’t lose her, wouldn’t let go.

I called my vet’s office but they didn’t have any available appointments and I didn’t have the money to pay for an emergency vet. So we fed her, kept her warm and I prayed for her to get better. Upset, I called my Dad.  He kept saying it would be okay, she had pulled through before.

“Stop it,” my mom said.  “This time it’s different.”

“You two always tell me to be positive, to not think the worst  will happen,” Dad retorted. “Now I’m going to be positive for you.”

Finally we got Electra in for an appointment. Carrying her, I could feel her bones against her fur. But it would be okay.  The vet would find a magic bullet. He examined her. As he did, Electra stared at me with big green eyes. Then we stared at each other.

I heard what Electra had to say. I’d been hanging on so tightly, I hadn’t considered what she needed. In human time, Electra had lived for 126 years. She needed to leave. She needed me to let her go. The vet said something about tests, calling us with the results, proceeding from there. He gave her a shot so she wouldn’t be in pain.

No way could I put her to sleep. But I knew I had to help her through the last night of her life.

When we got home, she drank a little milk and then went back into the spare room. I went to my room and cried. My jaw still hurt like crazy. I can’t tell you how I got through the night. Connie May Fowler wrote that when she had to deal with things she didn’t like, she went into a white space. That must be where I went.  I had to. I needed to be there to breathe.

I took my sleeping bag into the spare room. I looked into Electra’s eyes and said, “If you want to leave, go ahead. I’ve been so blessed to have you in my life.”

Electra looked at me and I knew she understood. This was letting go, the hardest letting go I ever had to do. I turned off the light.

Hours later, she started to shriek. I held her paw. In the dark, I tried not to think. I told her I loved her. Holding her paw, I fell back to sleep. I knew when I woke up in the morning, she would be gone.

Electra  died while I slept. I felt so stunned. The worst had happened. How could I still be here, still breathe, still function?  Still in the white space, I managed to get dressed.

My mother, my cousin, my landlady Kathryn and I attended the funeral we held in the yard Electra had come to love so much. My cousin brought flowers. I gently placed Electra in her favorite satin pillowcase.

Later a friend sent me a condolence card. “Such a lady,” she wrote about Electra. “So beautiful, so elitist.” All of it, so true.

I wandered in a fog. People recommended pet loss groups but I didn’t go. Instead I reread Anne Lamott’s essay on This Dog’s Life. I watched the Gilmore Girls episode, the one where Lorelai and Rory’s neighbors lose their 34 year-old cat.  Rory asks her neighbor Morey if there’s anything she can do. He says, “This is life, Rory. It breaks your heart.”

Life had broken my heart and  I couldn’t find glue to fix it.

My soul felt like it had been shot full of Novocain. I gained fifteen pounds. I snapped at people at work. I felt so much guilt.  I had guilt about what happened. Guilt I didn’t have enough money to take her to an emergency vet. Guilt I went to sleep that night. But mostly I felt guilty because Electra had left.

Finally when I read Eckhart Tolle’s A New Earth, I realized that I couldn’t stop her death. Ego caused me to think that I could.

There are times I still feel sad about Electra. I let myself feel sad. Then I try to remember the good things, the times she drooled on me,  the times I didn’t want to get out of bed so she climbed in bed with me,  how when I watered the garden she walked beside me with her head pointed towards the sun.

Months later, I went to the shelter and got another cat,  Ida B. Then another cat appeared in my yard. I named her Opal. Then came Felix, the cat who’s missing now. I’ve prayed so hard that  sometimes I feel like I need to give God a break, so I pray to Electra instead. “Just watch over Felix, okay? Keep him safe.”  Wherever Felix wandered, I know Electra will do this important job.

I miss Electra. I always will. But I’m so grateful to have had her in my life. One night as I drifted to sleep listening to Will Ackerman’s The Bricklayer’s Beautiful Daughter, I saw her for a moment, young and healthy. She had gained back  the weight she lost. Her coat shined now. I told her how much I loved her, that I would see her again.

Slowly but deliberately, she walked away, her tail in the air.

She didn’t leave any paw prints behind.

##

A pet often becomes more than a dog or cat.  The pet becomes a piece of our heart, part of our family.  Remember, guilt is a stage of grief. It’s more than grief; we’re on a journey.  Life will ultimately bring us what we need whether it’s a book, movie, television show, song or dream.   We don’t need to stop feeling to let go; we just need to let who or what we love leave when it’s time to go.

26 Responses to When a Pet Needs to Leave

  • Florence says:

    Hello everyone, I lost my dog , adtually I should say, my soulmate,Mela in 2002.When she died I nearly died too as the pain was so unbareable.Mela had come into my life by chance, thus destiny, as my mother obliged me to go look for a bay dog as she had taken my first dog away from me for the second time in my life, which I could never forgive her and ” to make it up to me” , she wanted to buy me a new dog which I didn´t want. I wanted my old dog back, but that she wouldn´t allow.So we went to the breader and my mother chose a dog of the same race as my dog, that had been taken from me.She thought that soon I would fall in love with the puppy and everything would be just fine. While she bought the dog, I was walking around there and I saw a little black Cocker Spaniel with very moody ears looking at me. I picked it up and looked in her eyes and fell in love. But still I resisted, we went home with the dog my mother had chosen, but I couldn´t forget the eyes of the little Spaniel and the next day, after convincing my mother with whom i still lived at the time, I went back to get her.That was probably the best thing I ever did in my whole life !Mela saved my life and saved me.Since the separation of my parents, 6 years before findig her, I hadn´t been myself anymore.I had changed from a very extroverted person to a withdrawn, quiet one, that didn´t trust anyone. I have to explain that my father, what I didn´t know back then, was a drug addict and had told me as a child that he didn´t love me anymore and I adored him , worshiped him even and tried everything to make him love me and care about me, but after his separation from my mother I was the one that had to make a huge effort to get to see him once in a while and then still get verbally abused, that is probably where I got my codependency from in the first place. But then came Mela, she taught me how to love and trust and forgive again, she turned me back into the person I really was, that joyful, spontaneous happy person that enjoyed life, with her. She was with me every step of the way, when my first boyfriend left me 9 weeks before our planed wedding, when I left my homecountry to live in another one. She met my other 2 boyfriends and finally she met my future husband at the time and she moved with me to his country.There she got really sick, cancer, and I blamed myself for it, because I didn´t let her sleep in my bedroom anymore, because my husband didn´t want animals in the bedroom and I thought I should compromise to finally have the relationship I always dreamed about.Mela got sicker and sicker and every night I didn´t want to go up to the bedroom because I didn´t want to leave her, when I eventually did, she looked at me very sadly and it really hurt me, but I thought with time my husband would understand an then she could sleep upstairs with me. I didn´t fight for her although she had spent her life fighting for me and protecting me and forgiving me when I made mistakes. And then it was to late, she was to weak and atlhough I had prayed for a miracle it didn´t come. One morning she vomited water and I could see that everything became dry in her, so i called the vet and they put her to sleep in my arms in our home.Death itself was not horryfying, it was really peaceful .A few days later I was lying on my couch, apathic, feeling unbearable pain as all of a sutten something hit me in my heart and then I could see wonderful colours that I have never seen before or after that and I felt instense pure love filling my heart and I knew it was a message that she had arrived well and that she had forgiven me, something I wasn´t able to do for many years and still am not sure whether I have now. She was and is a part of my soul and I still can feel her sometimes and know that we will see eachother again when I die. Since that experience I am not afraid of death anymore because I know that it is just a transition to another plan where everything is just love.

    • I know and have seen that other people have a “soul connection” with their dog. It’s more than just a pet; it’s a part of their life, their heart. Thank you for writing and sharing that beautiful story. And — you did nothing wrong by honoring your husband. It sounds to me like you took excellent care of that black Cocker Spaniel with the soulful eyes. Melody Beattie

  • Emi says:

    What a beautiful story. I am in tears. Thank you, Jennifer. I love the part where you wrote that it was ego that made you think you could prevent her death. I have a beloved pet who is still alive but getting along in years and he is starting to show signs of decline. I often find myself in tears worrying about him. I am terrified of the thought of living my life without him but I guess that’s a sign of how enriched and wonderful my life has been bc of him. Everyday he is on my gratitude list b/c each day with him is a gift.

    • Emi, thanks for taking the time to comment on Jennifer’s story. She wrote such a beautiful one. I think she checks the site regularly, so I’m pretty sure she’ll see your comment soon. Sorry about the pain you’re going through. I hate the impermanence thing about life. Melody

  • Kristi says:

    Jennifer,
    Thank you so much for this touching story. As a lifetime pet lover & owner of 4 cats & 2 dogs, I can so very much relate to your love for Electra & all the other kitties that have come into your life. Growing up I had pets that passed but I lived on a farm & it was just a way of life. Now at 31 with just me & my pets, I know it will be terribly hard for me if/when something happens to one of them. I’ve seen many people, including my mom, deal with knowing when to let go. I recently picked up a stray that the vet said could probably be lovingly & expensively nursed back to health but I could just look in her eyes & knew that she was tired, so I let her go. I only had her for two days & I cried. Letting myself “feel” isn’t something I’m used to but I did & I did reading your story about Electra. After wiping the tears away, I knew I had to write to thank you for your beautiful story.

    • Thanks for your beautiful comment to Jennifer. So many people make the mistake of thining that “letting go” means they don’t have any further feelings about the matter. That’s not letting go; that’s going cold. Letting go usually means letting ourselves freely feel whatever we need. Again, thanks for taking the time to write to Jennifer. She really did a beautiful job. Melody

      • Kristi says:

        You are so right about feeling Melody. As a sidenote, I’m working through several of your books, currently Codependents’ Guide to the Twelve Steps & am learning to “feel” again, rather than repress my feelings. Thank you for sharing your lessons & stories for others to get help from! And thanks again to Jennifer for her beautiful story!

  • Rem says:

    Thank you for writing this. I found your story looking for some comforting, because my own cat is going through his last hours or days beside me right now.

    And Melody, thank you, your book Finding your way home is always on my bedside table in difficult times.

    Rem

    • I’m sorry to hear about your cat. I’ve been feeling an increased pressure to find a good story about losing a beloved pet and recently the opportunity to acquire one came alone. It made me cry (and I don’t have a pet). It also felt very comforting to me. I’m glad you found comfort in it too. Peace. Melody Beattie

      • By the way, I’ve been passing everyone’s compliments on to the writer (re the story about “When a Pet Needs to Leave.” I want the writer to know how you all feel about her work. So be assured she’s aware. It’s kind of all of you to cpomment and I know the writer appreciates it too.

        • Jennifer says:

          For Rem: The best advice I can give you is put one foot in front of another and be there for your cat. It is so hard but it’s the only thing you can do.

  • GREENy says:

    Jennifer this is absolutely wonderful. I think you have touched everyone’s heart and spirit. Thank you.

  • Janet Broder says:

    Jennifer, Thank you for sharing your story about Felix with us. We’ve all had the experience of losing someone we love so much. Sharing your grief with others who can empathize can be very helpful, of itself. Your words are very comforting to me also, as you know that I recently lost my Mamakitty. I too have been praying and hoping for Felix’s healthy and safe return. I am still hopeful that he willl show up, but if not like to think that perhaps he’s encountered some other kind person who has recognized his need and is taking care of him. And if not, may he rest in peace.

  • Jennifer says:

    Thank you everyone for your comments!!

  • Susan K says:

    I will think of Zelda sharing a sunny day with Electra and Felix dropping by for a visit. Fantastic writing – consider yourself my angel in the here and now.

  • Barbara Pottie Holmes says:

    Jennifer, your story lacked nothing. It reminded me of a family cat we had.

    We who have had cats with such personalities feel pity for those who say cats are aloof. Thank you for sharing it with the rest of us.

    Barb

    • As I’ve said, I agree. I’ve emailed Jennifer and told her she needs to check out the comments on her story. She really did a beautiful job (and I do pay writers I hired for content-based stories for the site). That’s the last one I was looking for — a beautiful story about pets and I’m grateful Life brought Jennifer to me and this site. Melody

  • Katie Burke says:

    Jennifer, this is beautiful. I am bawling. I love Electra! I am going to pray to her sometimes, too; she seems like a cat who gets things done. My heart breaks for your loss of sweet Felix, and Electra before him. Thank you, Melody, for featuring this deeply moving essay.

  • Ivory Madison says:

    Jennifer, this is a wonderful story. Your humor and intelligence shine through as you tell of a great love lost. Thanks to you and Melody for such personal, caring writing that helps so many people get through difficult times. I feel very lucky to be a reader!

    • Thanks for taking the time to comment. I, too, am grateful to the author for sharing her beautiful story — and to HP and Life for sending her to us. This particular subject was a glaring hole in this site but I had to wait for the right time, person and story. MB

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