Sometimes you just have to have fun with your posts. Here are pictures of a king tide in West Seattle, made bigger by storm surge from a wind storm. Enjoy!
©2012 Robyn M Fritz
Bridging the Paradigms: re-connecting people and the planet
discussing intuition, culture, earth changes, human-animal bond, Fallon the Citrine Lemurian Quartz
Sometimes you just have to have fun with your posts. Here are pictures of a king tide in West Seattle, made bigger by storm surge from a wind storm. Enjoy!
©2012 Robyn M Fritz
An interesting thing happened yesterday when I was out running errands: I ran into culture. Then I made a conscious choice to choose my culture. Again.
It’s impossible to escape the current debates in our country over gun control. Frankly, I don’t think controlling guns will control violence, not as long as people think civil discourse is hate speech and we glorify football, the military, and gory ‘entertainment.’ Because it’s not that our culture is violent: it’s that we love that it is and choose it.
Worse, it’s become the first thing we think about when we’re just out there trying to live our quiet, loving lives.
I’ve lived in the same Seattle beach community for nearly 25 years. We’ve had our share of incidents here, but we’re as American as apple pie—whatever that means.
What should it mean? That, really, is the question.
So, I was running errands when I noticed a woman rush into the street to flag me down. In a quick glance I saw: she was worried, dressed for business, and obviously needed something. Bad enough to risk flagging down a complete stranger.
While all this registered I noticed something else: I wondered, briefly, if she was trying to scam me, if I’d pull over and get shot or carjacked.
“Really?” I said to myself. “What is your problem, Robyn?”
My problem is culture.
But I kept the doors locked and rolled the window down far enough to talk with her. “Do you need help?” I asked her.
She had an important appointment, had missed her bus, and needed a ride to the bus stop. My gut sense saw nothing wrong, so I offered her a ride. I changed the order of my errands and took her straight to the bus stop.
As we chatted on the short drive, she said how much she believed in god (interesting, since I don’t, and I’d had that conversation a lot lately). For proof she pointed to a few recent incidents in which she’d been provided for at the last minute, just like she had with me. She had two possible appointments that morning (I never asked for what) and trusted in god to get her to one of them. She’d overslept and missed the first one, and had just missed the bus that would take her to the second. Everyone she’d tried to flag down (all men, by the way) had completely ignored her. Then I’d pulled over.
I said, “Well, maybe god should buy you an alarm clock, so you don’t miss the bus.”
“But,” she said, undaunted. “You came along.”
Indeed. And we made it to the bus stop just in time, and off she went to her appointment.
Now is this a lesson in intuition? Well, I work as an intuitive, but no, it wasn’t, any more than I’ve learned to trust my intuition and I had no sense she was anything more than a ditz (who was TOO trusting). But even intuition can be wrong—my first reaction on seeing her in the street was to ignore her. Was that intuition at work?
No, it was fear. A choice of culture.
I chose my culture, again, in an instant yesterday when a hard choice was in front of me. It was the kind of decision we face every day: how do we choose to live?
The choices as I saw them: ignore her, call the police, stop and help. In that order. As I saw them, they saddened me. When did the right choice become the last one? When did we, as citizens of the planet, as Americans, abandon love?
This is what we need to discuss in our country: what is culture, what is choice, how do we choose, what do we want?
I think in the last few weeks we’ve made our choice, as citizens, as Americans. While the politicians and the media traded barbs over violence, the ordinary average people like us simply reached out and hugged grieving strangers, wrapped community and love around a town that had just lost children to violence, and spread that love as far and wide as we could.
Because love is our only choice.
Will it stick? Will we finally say ‘enough,’ and choose love? Will we insist on a culture that lives love, however hard that is at times?
I hope so, but I don’t know. I do know that love is spreading. I was already the naïve person who would stop and help a stranger, and people are always chiding me for that. Well, truth is, I’m proud of me, proud that despite all the crap out there, I still choose the simple things that love prompts me to do.
Will someone stick a gun in my face someday because of that? I don’t know. But if that stops me, and stops you, then we’re all lost already, and it won’t matter.
The world has more good people in it than bad people. It’s just not fashionable to feature us. I think we should change that.
How? By choosing our culture.
So far, we’ve let fear rule public discourse, enough that our natural instincts to help are nearly undone by it—as I almost ignored a stranger yesterday who needed a simple act of kindness.
I choose love. It’s hard, it’s scary sometimes, it’s no longer the norm. But it can be. We’ve all seen how love can lead the way.
What is as American as apple pie? The culture of peace, community, love.
Be trusting. Be wise. Love. It will make a difference. It has to.
© 2012 Robyn M Fritz
How do we deepen the bond between humans and animals?
Start with this handout I gave away at a recent seminar on this topic moderated by noted animal communicator Joan Ranquet.
Change your mindset, change your world. When we look at the world as equals, we learn that humans aren’t in charge of the world, we’re in connection with it. What does that mean for your multi-species family?
Two ideas to make life easier.
Honestly, it’s almost like you wade through disinformation throughout your animals’ lives. Best advice: read up and fire anyone, veterinarian or not, who insists on being the boss of you and your animals. Go for care providers who really care, are really smart, and who know what they’re doing.
My sore spot: the absolute lies about early spay/neuter that are being told by the animal welfare community. Here’s the truth:
What we don’t know can kill our animals. What we do know:
Sources:
My online magazine: BridgingtheParadigms.com. Yes, just hit the search bar and you’ll find my articles on this heartbreaking subject.
Ron Hines DVM. A well-rounded article on early spay/neuter.
Laura J. Sanborn. Research on early spay/neuter.
Bottom line: When you make a commitment to an animal, it’s a life choice. Don’t make one you regret because you’re not informed. The life you save, the healthy animal you’ll help create, may be yours.
Spread the word: love matters, choice matters, the truth matters. You’re not getting it from a lot of people in the animal welfare community. You did get it here.
© 2012 Robyn M Fritz
I ended up in the ER on a Sunday evening last month. While I was facing a potentially serious health crisis, there was one thing I didn’t worry about: my dog, Alki, and Grace the Cat were provided for. Sort of. That’s what the human-animal bond, my concept of multi-species families, includes: taking care of them.
Truth is, I have long since put estate plans in effect for my animals, with rigorous guidelines on who holds the money for their lifetime care and who gets to decide where they go. Included in that: the personalities and needs of each animal, so even my closest friends would know exactly what I know about my animal family.
But here’s one thing I didn’t have: I didn’t have a card in my wallet that would point emergency workers or the police to my home to see to my animals in case the unthinkable happened to me.
The unthinkable does happen, as we all know. Whether it’s a natural event, from weather to earthquake, to a car accident or illness—or even, say, being stranded on the freeway in a sudden snow storm, which has happened several times in the last few years in Seattle, of all places—what will happen to your animals when you’re not there to care for them?
Yes, trusted neighbors and I share house keys, so eventually they would have checked on my kids, assuming they thought to check on me. But how long is eventually? When you’re the only human in the house, like I am, the risks go up—for me, yes, because the death rate of singles is far higher than others simply because everybody else has someone around when they, say, have a heart attack and pass out, or anaphylactic shock sets in, or, well, when the ‘downs’ of life suddenly wipe out the ‘ups.’
I wrote about this issue last year in my post: If they die before you do: protecting your animal family. Just today I found a great article online (at nbcnews.com) that people should know about. It talks about how Superstorm Sandy pointed out the urgent need for estate planning for pets—as if we hadn’t learned that in other events in history, from freak snowstorms to earthquakes. Or as I was reminded during my trip to the ER—when we discover we’re all too mortal.
I was lucky that a good friend was home that night and saw me through my trip to the ER. When I got home at 1 a.m., my dog and cat were anxiously pacing and whining at the door. If I hadn’t come home that night, either because of a hospital stay (which almost happened) or my death, my friend would have been able to step in. But we don’t always have time to call a friend.
What I liked about this article on estate planning is the idea of a pet card in your wallet that identifies your animals and alerts responders that they will need to be cared for if you can’t. I once knew someone who slipped and fell in the grocery store and ended up in emergency surgery for a shattered leg: it was two days before she was alert enough to call someone to take care of her dog.
Two days.
So wake up, people. Put that card in your wallet—that night, the people in the ER would have found mine and sent someone to take care of my kids (well, at least it would have been possible, if they had looked, and cared, and acted, and we never know about that). Put your animals in your will. Give someone a key to your place.
Create an emergency backup plan. Sometimes knowing people, having a community, is fun. And sometimes it can make frightened animals feel better, and even save their lives.
Animals are families. Take care of them.
© 2012 Robyn M Fritz
by Robyn 2 Comments
Sure, we know play is a necessary part of our lives: it relieves stress, adds balance, and inspires creativity. But we’re usually so busy with ‘life’ that we simply ignore it.
Three things lately reminded me about the importance of play: an orca superpod off Alki Point in October, the Rainbow Boys’ guide team, and my deceased dog, Murphy, showing up to sing with Beethoven (yes, THAT Beethoven).
Orcas know how to play, like the breaching orca photographed by our neighbor, Gary Jones (thanks for sharing, Gary!). My dog, Alki, and I joined the throngs of people enjoying the superpod: everybody was relaxed, happy, cheerfully sharing binoculars and observations. Party atmosphere ruled.
Watching people watching orcas made me wonder: does it really take something extraordinary like that for us to relax and play? We don’t need to get permission to play, do we?
Of course the orcas were hunting. They were clear across the Sound from us, but I knew they were also enjoying themselves when I asked them if they would swim over to my side, so I could get a better look, and they laughed. The fishing was better where they were, they said. Hard to fault that logic, since orcas don’t go to grocery stores.
So I said, “Well, can you come to visit tomorrow, same time, only over here?”
“Sure!” one yelled, following that with a huge “Yay!” as it leaped clear out of the water in a breach that made all the gawkers, including me, laugh.
It was several days later, though, before they showed up again. When I teased them about forgetting our ‘date,’ they said: “Orca time or human time?” They told me how much they love being orcas: the water, the food, being together, their curiosity about us, their amusement at how much we love seeing them.
Yes, orcas love being orcas. To them, the hunt is as fun as it is necessary to life. Work is fun, and life-giving.
I am reminded of this daily in my Mindset Alchemy sessions with clients. Lately a client’s guides have shown up in sessions with other people. I’ve started calling these guides the Rainbow Boys: they are young athletes, vibrant, dressed in rainbow-swirled long-sleeved outfits that end below the knee. They’re carrying basketballs, soccer balls, balloons, whatever they need to play with while they check out what’s going on. They are perfect guides for my client, who has leaped into his dream of becoming a professional athlete (because it’s work he enjoys—fun!). But I didn’t know why these guides were showing up with other people.
“Sacred play,” the Rainbow Boys said.
“You guys just like playing with Fallon,” I teased.
“Yes,” they said, crowding in to play with Fallon, who, apparently, is a sports nut. “But it’s time for sacred play.”
They then taught me a body technique I’ve started calling “Marshmallow Spine.” In it, we first get the client grounded and balanced, and then we draw air in from the front of the body and let it float into the back. The air, like the air inside all the balls the Rainbow Boys play with, expands to cushion and relax the body. Instead of a stiff, hard spine, clients experiment with a soft spine that can still support the body but move more freely and expansively. Marshmallow Spine: support that nourishes. Flexibility. It takes a flat ball and allows it to bounce. It’s the exuberance in an orca breach. The play in our busy lives.
As I’ve experimented with the Marshmallow Spine technique I’ve noticed that it is the same feeling I got the day I was watching the orcas play: it was relaxing into joy. It’s the breath of play expanding into tense bodies. It fills empty spaces we didn’t know were empty until joy flowed in.
I was reminded of this as I was preparing dinner for friends last weekend. I turned on my stereo, surprised that it was full of classical music, which I hadn’t listened to in years. Then I remembered that I had chosen these CDs for my beloved Murphy’s funeral in March, as I consciously chose music that matched her vibrant nature.
Now as Beethoven’s Fifth filled the house, Murphy showed up, smiling, with her trademark cheerful, teasing attitude. I asked her why that music. She said it was music “angels sang to.”
“Angels singing to Beethoven?” I asked.
Murphy nodded and started harmonizing with Beethoven. Other voices sang along.
“It’s play,” Murphy said. “Sacred play.”
I got it. Beethoven wasn’t just a genius as a musician: he loved his work, it was fun for him. He tapped into the creativity that comes from hard work combined with inspiration and the pure joy of doing it. He played. He connected to others with his play, and he’s still doing it.
All these were my reminders that play matters. Not just for relieving stress in our busy lives: for keeping us open to joy and creativity. For helping us integrate joy into our lives. For connecting to other in our necessarily solitary journey through life.
We’ve had a hard year at our house. We lost Murphy in March. In October, we dealt with serious illnesses at our house, life-threatening conditions that are all resolved now. At the end of a grueling month we played: with each other, with orcas, with the Rainbow Boys and some adventurous clients, and with our beloved Murphy as she sang with the angels to Beethoven’s Fifth.
We discovered again the joy of sacred play. Orcas delight us in part because we recognize play at work. Full deep breathing relaxes us. Beethoven’s music endures because he took joy in his work. When we allow joy in our lives, we do the same thing. We connect: to other beings doing their work, to ourselves. To life in harmony with our beloved planet.
Play matters. Now just go do it: play. And let me know what your Marshmallow Spine discovers.
© 2012 Robyn M Fritz
It’s never fun to be sick. In the last month, all four of us were down: Alki, my Cavalier boy, with a serious infection that required multiple rounds of antibiotics and herbal support and acpuncture; Grace the Cat, with an upset stomach; and me with repeated rounds of bronchitis and an unexpected trip to the ER (well, are those kinds of things ever expected?).
Nevertheless, we always find something to enjoy, even if it’s dessert. Especially when we live at the beach.
I grumble about it being cold on Alki. Really, Alki Beach has to be the coldest spot in Puget Sound, at least our end of it, which gets the wind from north and south, and it’s always cool, if not downright frigid. But I live here because I need to be by the ocean. I love the smell, the sounds, the sights. Sea lions are cool, bald eagles awesome, and whales, well, most of us agree we live here because sometimes we get to see whales. Or orcas.
We got lucky and saw them twice in a week. The first time, Alki and I stood watching dozens of orcas in the distance. I asked the orcas, “Can’t you come over to this side of the Sound, so I can see you better?”
One orca said, “The fish are running here.”
“How about tomorrow, same time, closer?” I bargained.
“Okay!” the orca yelled, and then shouted, “Yay!” just as it breached.
Okay, I was thrilled. The orcas also weren’t there the next day (too busy elsewhere, they said). But they were back shortly afterwards. Thanks to my neighbor, Gary Jones, I have pictures to share with you.
Enjoy!
© 2012 Robyn M Fritz
photos © 2012 Gary R Jones
by Robyn 4 Comments
“What am I supposed to do?” is a question I hear a lot in my intuitive practice.
A more challenging question is: “How do I become my best self?” This melds the search for identity and meaning with the practical, emotional, mystical, and, yes, fun aspects of our personal and professional lives.
The best thing? Both questions have the same answer: Get out of your way and get love.
Okay, fine, you say, but how do you do that?
You connect — with yourself, others and the community of all life. Yes, it’s hard work, but it will forever change how you look at the world and your role in it.
Ready? Here are five tips to get you started.
1. Change your mindset. As humans we’re trapped in a mindset we created: it says that we are at the “top of the food chain,” and so in charge. The problem is, the human paradigm of the world is wrong. From my intuitive practice of speaking and working with all life, whether animals, homes, businesses or nature, I know that everything is alive, has a soul, consciousness, responsibility and free choice. Most important: we are equals with all beings. This is the earth paradigm, and it is absolutely the way the planet really works — the only ones who don’t seem to know it are humans.
Meeting all life as equals is liberating: freed from the burden and ego-lock of being in charge, we can discover how the world really works, and how we can work with it. Everything changes — science, technology, medicine, art, politics, religion, culture, our daily lives. How do you live in a world where everything, from our chairs to animals to a volcano, has a job to do — and an attitude?
We can better find our way in the world when we understand the path that other beings take, and how the patterns weave together. It’s easy enough to do: sit down and talk to other beings. For example, ask your home how you can make it more comfortable in its work. When we expand into wonder, awe, respect and collaboration, we learn how our unique talents and abilities mesh with those of all beings, and how we each contribute to the welfare of our living, conscious planet. If we’re open to experience life as it really exists, we’re open to the mystery of the universe itself. Fun happens. Great choices (and conversations) abound.
2. Tap your intuition. Tapping our intuition is no more (or less) a spiritual practice than tapping our other senses. We are incomplete without our intuition. Dig deep to discover your strongest intuitive skill: knowing, seeing, feeling or hearing. Practice with simple things, like choosing dessert or buying a new shirt. As you intuitively learn to make better daily choices, you will enhance your ability to make life-changing ones, from where to live to what work to do. Intuition is our birthright: learning to use it means you’re taking the blinkers off being fully human, enriching your life and all others.
3. Claim your power. Never give your power away. The power sappers can be subtle: “synchronicity” and “what’s meant to be” can be two of them. It’s inspiring to get signs that offer both insight and connection, but sometimes things just happen. Learn from them, but never surrender deeply informed personal choice. Be resourceful, thoughtful, inventive. When you seek outside human opinions, accept only what resonates with your deeper, intuitive self. What is your truth? You, and only you, are the leader of yourself.
4. Get practical. Keep your day job. Taking care of the basics will help you get firmly grounded and balanced in the everyday world. Practicality informs inspiration.
5. Get creative — take time off. Taking a break is not only okay, it’s necessary. Taking time to laugh, play, and explore the world around you refreshes and enlightens you. Honest.
These five tips will help you become your own best self. Of course, they all come down to one: get connected.
While we all want and need to find meaning in our lives, our deepest yearning is for connection to the mystery of life itself. We find it in a healthy, balanced, collaborative relationship with the community of all life. We find it in love.
We start by creating our best selves. By changing our mindset to recognize the equality of all life, fine-tuning our intuition, and becoming strong and practical and creative, we shake off the “should” and free ourselves to love. Love connects us to our essential worthiness: we need to love and be loved, we are worthy of love, and we achieve that by loving ourselves first.
How we carry that into creating fulfilling lives is the mystery we’re here to explore. Have fun with it!
© 2012 Robyn M Fritz
Thank you to New Connexion: Pacific Northwest’s Journal of Conscious Living, for publishing this article on Sept. 17, 2012
It’s been six months since I lost my beloved Cavalier King Charles Spaniel, Murphy. The devastating fog is lifting, but the sadness lingers.
I’ve received many wonderful stories from people who’ve been touched by my family’s journey through grief as recounted in my e-book, My Dog Is Dying: The Real Life Crappy Choice Diary. Somehow they discovered something that lifted their own grief, if only briefly, that gave them hope for a future without their beloved animals.
Sometimes they doubt their wonderful stories, the signs that meant something to them, that confirmed the power of the human-animal bond in our lives, the depth of a multi-species family.
I believe in synchronicity, that signs or symbols help us resolve difficulties, or just make us laugh and enjoy being alive on our wonderful planet. I also believe that we can use synchronicity as a crutch to avoid making up our own minds about how we get through life. We have to be careful with everything we do, every tool or ability we use, including our intuition.
Meaning, if it makes us feel better or make wiser decisions, that’s great. If it gives us an excuse to pass the buck, not so great. Making informed choices is our job. As is finding comfort and meaning in the midst of devastation.
I was reminded of this today as I stumbled across an old email from someone who had been wondering if her deceased dog was okay. She wrote that later that day there was a thunderstorm, and afterwards she saw a rainbow, and a chunky white cloud formation above it in the shape of a heart. She thought it was a cliché, but felt it was a message from her dog that he was okay, that he had made it to the rainbow bridge, and she wanted to share.
I thought it was wonderful, and shared my story with her.
I was flying back east in June to be with my best friend of 40 years, to grieve privately for my lost Murphy. As the plane took off, a big white cloud formation took shape in the Seattle skies: a Cavalier King Charles Spaniel dancing in the sky, ears and tail streaming behind her. Yes, my beloved Murphy was wishing me a fun journey.
Stories matter. The truth they reveal, the comfort they bring. Nothing is a cliché if it helps heal broken hearts.
Love your multi-species family. Make each day count. Make sure your only regret is that you ran out of time, not love. Take comfort in the signs and synchronicities that arise. They got our ancestors through the long dark nights. They can help us, too.
Now, what special stories will you share with us?
© 2012 Robyn M Fritz
It’s hard to say goodbye to a beloved animal companion.
It’s harder to live the goodbye.
Murphy and I managed to live our goodbye, accompanied by Alki and Grace the Cat. We found the courage, fortitude, and love to fully and gracefully embrace it, adding depth to the many years we’d shared.
It’s not easy, but it’s possible.
How? By living the human-animal bond as a multi-species family. This is a new way of living the human animal bond—as equals with free choice. Murphy and I lived it together for 13½ years. We added depth—and kinks—when her Cavalier brother, Alki, came along 10 years ago and our resident alien, Grace the Cat, a year later.
Somehow we all learned together how choice and family intersect—we learned how to balance our needs and desires as individuals with everyone else’s. We learned to compromise.
When we discovered that Murphy had a splenic tumor and was dying, I knew it was time to define what death is like in a multi-species family.
I didn’t want to, but I had to. Then I wrote about it here, exploring the raw, heartfelt, angry, mystical, practical things that real families live through when someone they love is dying. When I started to hear from people who were either also losing their dogs—or had, and were struggling to accept it—I decided to pull it all together in one place—an e-book.
Here’s a chance to find community in storytelling. An opportunity to stop and think about what the end of your animal family will look like—and why. Your story won’t be exactly like ours, but perhaps you’ll get an idea that will help you live it, and what more can any of us ask?
So here are some things to think about.
Honestly, like most people, I never spent a lot of time thinking about death in my family. Sure, it was coming, and it certainly wasn’t a stranger in my life, but still.
We were lucky: we had a few months with Murphy after we knew she was dying.
In the beginning I was in such shock, and under such pressure to act (you don’t have time to waste when an aggressive cancer might be eating a loved one) that all I could do was juggle the plain hard facts. Murphy was involved in that, obviously, but I neglected to tell Alki and Grace the Cat. So there was tension and sadness in the house, which made Grace the Cat act out and confused Alki. Our life was turned upside down, as happens in every loving family when a crisis occurs.
Once I stopped and concentrated on each of my animal family members, things calmed down.
Alki is a live-in-the-moment dog. Mr. Happy-Go-Lucky doesn’t think too far beyond his nose. He noticed things weren’t right, but dismissed them until one night when we were sacked out in bed and I was reading. In those last weeks Murphy’s breathing was not exactly labored, but it was certainly louder, and that night Alki suddenly heard it. He sat up, turned and looked at her, and horror washed across his face. He looked at me, shocked and uncertain. In that moment I knew he got it. All I could do was hold him and explain it again. My sensitive boy was losing his best friend—he was stunned in the moment, and then went looking for a cookie.
Since Murphy’s death, Alki has reveled in his “single dog” status, but it took him some weeks to quit moping and looking for Murphy. He’s finally quit standing by the car, waiting for me to bring her inside. He’s still quieter than normal. His happy heart plays and he sticks close, but he’s often somber.
Grace the Cat was unruly until I sat down and explained to her what was happening. She’d been ignored because both dogs were sick at the same time—like Murphy, Alki, too, had developed a slight bronchial infection, and I was just taking Grace for granted. As I told her, she sat and stared at me, eyes wide and ears raised high in that startled manner she wears when things just don’t fit. After that she started snuggling with Murphy, spending hours every day stretched out or curled beside her on Murphy’s bed. It was both touching and sad. Murphy and Grace the Cat had never been great friends, although Murphy had yearned for a cat friend, but at the end of her life she finally got her wish—a cat to snuggle with.
Since Murphy’s death, Grace the Cat has point-blank refused to have anything to do with Murphy’s bed. She also clings to me even more, following me around the house and sitting and climbing on me: in some ways, she’s trying to make sure I don’t leave her like Murphy did.
I make sure each of them has space to grieve, that we grieve together. When they fought angrily with each other, I recognized it as grief and comforted them.
We always make sure to play.
Remember to pay attention to every family member, animal and otherwise. Guilt, worry, concern, fear, and jealousy are all part of the mix.
Family is good.
Make sure you are established with a great vet, and don’t be afraid to switch vets if something changes and you’re uncomfortable. A great vet must not insist on blanket routine vaccinations or early spay/neuter (yes, Murphy’s cancer is linked to early spay/neuter, as are some horrible things like thyroid disease, obesity, and arthritis). A great vet must understand nutrition and holistic care, must have a referral network to good specialists, and, above all, must support the multi-species family bond.
That is, great vets must know that they are partners but not in charge of the animal care team. You are. You make the decisions. Fire the bastards who think otherwise. I did.
Good vets are good.
I’ve learned more about veterinary care in my life with my animal family than most vets seem to ever know. I hope that scares you into paying attention. Find out what it takes to care for your animals. Figure out what makes sense to you. Do it.
When the vet told me that Murphy had an abdominal mass, we sat down and looked at the X-ray and radiologist’s report together. Then I ordered an ultrasound, and then I took Murphy to a surgical specialist. I found out what a splenic mass meant. I told Murphy. We figured out what to do together.
I didn’t think about Murphy getting old when she was a puppy new to my household. I didn’t think about age: about arthritis making life difficult for both of us, about old dogs becoming blind and deaf and feeble, or slipping from cheerful vigor into the clutches of an aggressive, incurable cancer. It happens.
Accompanying a senior pet through old age brings mystery, grace, frustration, exhaustion, and grief. What can you manage, afford—and stand? How do you explain it to the animal, the family, yourself?
Before you ever get an animal in the first place, consider how and why your family will walk that last road, together, because it always ends one way: in heartbreak.
If that makes you not want an animal, then please don’t get one. You won’t be doing anyone a favor, including yourself.
If that makes you flinch, excellent. You’re thinking. You’ll figure out a way to get through it, because life really is like that.
In fact, life with an aging animal is magnificent. If you’re looking for grace in action, this is it.
Life is good.
The current medical establishment often believes that fighting death, no matter the odds or the suffering involved, is more important than a life well lived and a death gently met. Someday they’ll grow up. In the meantime, you be a grown-up for them. Pain and suffering and disability are cruel things to suffer: I know, I am handicapped.
You will know when enough is enough. You cannot beat death. You can make it acceptable.
Yes, you’ll feel bad if you resort to euthanasia if you haven’t sorted through the whys and why-nots. You’ll feel bad if you don’t and drag out an ending that causes misery to no real purpose. You’ll feel bad when your dog dies, regardless.
Figure out what the limits are: your animal’s, the family’s, yours. Figure out what love looks like to you, from Day 1 with your animal to the end. Cling to love. Whatever ending you get.
Love is good.
Yes, I can talk with animals. So can a lot of other people. Establish a relationship with a professional intuitive, for everybody’s sake. It will inspire and enlighten you as you carve out a satisfying personal and professional life. It will give you additional perspective on tough life issues—like dying.
The last weeks of Murphy’s life were enriched by our work with a professional intuitive. Those sessions confirmed my own insights, added others, helped us say goodbye.
You hear the medical from the vet, what you want or not from family and friends, what you fear from yourself, and what love has to say from an intuitive.
Sometimes it is astonishing. I know, from my intuitive experience working with dying animals, and with deceased animals and humans and other beings, that we absolutely have to tell the dying what is happening and ask what they want. All life knows when death is upon it: some animals resist because they think they’ve accidentally killed themselves, when it was illness; some animals want surgery and chemo because they need more time with their people; some animals want to die long before their humans are willing to let go; some animals like Murphy insist their body is breaking down anyway, and they want to experience the process.
Ask. You will hear. Let the answers guide you.
Everyone has the right to meet death on their own terms. Sometimes we get lucky enough, as I did with Murphy, to make sure that happens.
It matters. Trust me. Trust yourself. It matters.
Intuitive work is good.
A lot of people talk about energy work, from Reiki to all the new modalities popping up. Are they real? Yes. Are they useful? Absolutely. Are you ready for it? Maybe.
I’d done energy work of various sorts for years when a new modality came into my family’s life in 2007. It came at my request. I was told to use it to heal myself and my family and take it out in the world when it was time.
That time showed up in the fall of 2011, during intuitive sessions that my crystal partner, Fallon, and I were conducting with clients. When it showed up, I’d ask if people were willing to experience it; if so, we incorporated it into a session. The results are astonishing—and immediate.
After much thought, I now call it alchemical energy. It’s vibration—the vibration of transformation, of choice. I used it with Murphy, surrounding her belly with it. It supported her by helping her body stay strong and vibrant as it declined from her illness. It gave the cancer and Murphy a chance to meet and separate. Was it ever going to save her life? Not her body’s life, no, and her soul’s life was never in question. But it did help—her vet was astonished to hear she was looking for cookies and chasing Alki around the garage right up until the last few days of her life.
Alchemical energy was exactly what Murphy needed to “walk the mystery” of the end of her life—it surrounded her with Fallon’s golden, loving light. Alchemical energy is what I needed to walk the mystery with her. It’s what Alki and Grace the Cat needed to be there with us.
If you’re lucky enough to experience vibrational work with your dying animals, do so. Consider it well before you get to that point. It’s worth it. Just be careful. Energy, or vibration, is easy to work with, but sometimes the human practitioners are not.
Vibration is good.
Many of us humans live alone these days, but there are people out there, friends and family. Ask for help. Be clear that anyone you ask can refuse. Pay attention—you’ll learn things about life you never expected. It’s interesting to see who shows up, who doesn’t, and what new connections you make. It’s painful and exhilarating and worth it. Be grateful—people often mean well, but our culture is big on avoiding feelings, and dying, well, dying pushes buttons.
Above all, make sure all the decisions you make are yours—and your animal’s. Some family members, human and animal, just don’t get it. That’s their mindset, not yours. Forgive and move on. Or out.
Community is good.
We didn’t have much time to decide how to treat Murphy’s tumor. Whether it was cancer or not (they were almost completely certain it was, and they were right), a splenic tumor was going to kill her if I didn’t have it surgically removed. Fast. But the consequences of surgery—financially, physically, emotionally—were daunting. When I heard from several respected vets that the old dogs just don’t really recover from the surgery—well, I was glad Murphy and I had opted for quality of life and refused surgery.
I was glad we went to see the surgical specialist, who said they operate on these tumors all the time, but not because they hope to save an animal’s life, because there isn’t any hope. They operate because the families are shocked—usually, it presents as a crisis at the end stage—and they can’t get their heads around saying goodbye. My heart goes out to everyone who struggles to say goodbye, especially if it’s an emergency.
Whatever choice you make—if you’re lucky enough to make one, instead of having death suddenly drop on your doorstep—do everything possible to logically, rationally, emotionally, physically, and spiritually be at peace with it. To be able to live with it later. Regrets are unnecessary. They can also kill you.
Whatever you do, make sure you do the right thing in the moment. I regretted euthanizing my beloved English Cocker, Maggie, for years, because I dimly knew at the time that I was doing the wrong thing in that moment. That decision has affected every decision I’ve made for my multi-species family—it taught me to pay better attention. Now, although I miss Murphy terribly and always will, I know we did everything we could for her, everything we wanted and agreed upon, everything that made sense to us. We have no regrets.
I am at peace. She is at peace. Our family is at peace—and goes on.
If, by some horrible fate, your beloved dies suddenly, know that terrible things happen, and go on. If you did the best you could with whatever you had, it’s enough. If you didn’t, you’ll know better next time. That’s what life is—next times.
Acceptance matters.
Choice is good.
One thing I learned in my life with Murphy, the thing that opened up a new world and way of thinking for me, was that our bodies, whatever they are, whatever they look like, are bodies only, and not our souls. Of course bodies are important, and unfortunately, for humans, they seem to determine both intelligence and rights. Love learns to look beyond bodies. Mindset helps.
I had to smile this spring when Murphy said to me, via the renowned animal communicator Joan Ranquet, that “We are not our bodies.” Who would know better than the dog who was—who is—the ambassador to the dragon kingdom?
We are souls who take bodies to play and experiment in, to work in, to love in. Thinking of bodies as lesser or greater because of their form, animal or human (or whatever), distracts us from our purpose: of joining together as equals with all life to contribute to the welfare of our conscious, evolving planet.
And it really messes with our sense of humor.
Even so, I loved Murphy’s body and the personality her soul chose to be in it. I adored her. I grieve my lost soul mate. I would give a lot to have her back in her body—but I would not take it back with cancer, with pain, with disability. Not for one extra minute.
So, to grief.
I know that because death is part of life, we are also right now either grieving or preparing to grieve. I know that this series, My Dog Is Dying, has touched hearts around the world, has enabled people to share their grief. I am grateful for that.
Grief reminds us that we care, that we don’t live in isolation, that community isn’t just human. Grief hurts—it’s gut-wrenching, soul-testing pain. Nevertheless, I am glad for it, because if I weren’t grieving, I would never have lived the wonderful life I did with this amazing dog.
That matters. My grief matters. So does yours.
Grief is what death looks like in a multi-species family.
Grief reminds us that we love. Love matters.
Remember that.
Grief is good.
© 2012 Robyn M Fritz
by Robyn 2 Comments
I know, wishful thinking that this is the face of the last dog who died from splenic cancer.
Truth is, splenic cancer is epidemic in the United States. They say they don’t know why, but they are lying to us.
It’s early spay/neuter. Yes, early spay/neuter is causing splenic cancer in our dogs. Maybe other cancers, I don’t know. But this one, certainly—it’s not the sole cause of this cancer, but a huge one nonetheless. Do your homework. The research is out there. Our shelter and rescue communities, our breeders, and the veterinary community are ignoring this.
They won’t if we keep after them.
Yes, cancer comes from other things as well. Environmental toxins, bad luck, you name it. Cancer also comes from not spaying or neutering, as do other medical crises that can kill or maim our beloveds. Cancer is also symbiotic, which means it is trying to live with us, but the genetic differences are just too great for that right now. I know, I’m an intuitive, I’ve talked with cancer, but that’s another subject, another article for this magazine.
What works for our dogs? What keeps them healthy, and why? How do we make sure they’re healthy? How do we find the professionals who will help us figure that out, without lying to us, without being ignorant of the risks and the options, without being set on their own agendas?
How do we make informed, loving choices for our animals?
When we spay or neuter our dogs before they have fully matured, we interrupt their hormonal development—we interfere with the chemical process that nature puts in play to help organic beings grow. We’re not smart enough to know what that does to them, or to any animal. We just spay or neuter because it’s politically correct, it’s convenient, and we’re not thinking it through.
We don’t neuter our teenagers. We help them grow up.
Why should we give less thought and attention to our dogs, our cats, or any animal?
Let’s figure this out together. Please.
I’d call this “Murphy’s War,” and I did at first. I was angry when I learned the truth about splenic cancer, angrier when I learned Murphy had it. She’s gone now, and while the anger still burns, it is not anger that will save other dogs from this cancer.
Only love will save our dogs. Discussion. Setting aside all the prejudices we have about what should happen with animals, and figuring out what will happen because we’re fully informed, we’ve fully discussed it, we’ve set new guidelines, and we’ve figured out what works for our own animals.
Let’s sit down and talk this through. Figure it out. Please.
No, Murphy’s face is not the last face of splenic cancer. But maybe it will be enough to mark the beginning of the end of splenic cancer that comes from ignorance.
Maybe we can also figure out other sad things that have arisen from prejudice and political motives. Things like the strange contempt for purebred dogs and the weird devotion to mixed-breed dogs. Or the truly odd role of the shelter and rescue communities and their political counterparts as the new puppy millers: why else would they advocate not going anywhere but to them to buy a dog?
Yes, we have a lot to discuss. Nothing to argue about.
Because we’ll start from love. From trying to understand what we were all told to think, what we will think, what we will do, and why.
We’ll love each other and our animals. Together.
That’s why I don’t call it “Murphy’s War.” I call it “Murphy’s Choice.”
Which choice will you make? Status quo, which is clearly killing our dogs? Or love, which will figure out how to save them?
© 2012 Robyn M Fritz