(Closing excerpt)
Three weeks have passed since Our Little Buddy left us. The first
several days were the worst. Naturally, I have asked myself those
age-old questions, “What could I have done differently,” and “Did I do
enough?” But I keep coming up with “I don’t have a clue.”
Maybe it was
just her time to go.
But there’s that dull ache, and tears
still come to my eyes at the most unexpected times. Jean speaks That
Precious Puppy’s name, or I make a Freudian Slip and call someone else
by Buddy’s name. I pull a steak out of the refrigerator and place it in
the old frying pan, and I instantly regret it since… my mind is suddenly
overwhelmed with memories; bitter-sweet. My Little Friend loved steak,
and one whiff of that Medium Rare sent her galloping into the kitchen.
And I’d drop a couple of morsels into her mouth and she’d virtually
swallow them whole. So reminiscent of the gentile woman, and the
illusion of dogs under the Master’s table. But I hardly thought of My
Little Buddy that way. She was a member of the family. She was as near A
Child to me as I can express or imagine.
My mother-in-law
made a remark to my wife a few years before she, herself, passed away.
It was poignant. (She never wasted words, and they always had import.)
“Daughter, you know, Buddy won’t always be with you.”
I’ve made similar remarks to clients and friends. I might say,
“You know, we can’t stay here,” or I’ll refer to myself in fairly
graphic terms, “I hope you’ll be serving The Lord long after I’m
moldering away.”
And such statements are fairly academic and
theoretical ‘til they “come home to you.” When My Dear Buddy passed
away, it came home to me. The emotional chickens came home to roost.
I’ll never forget the long road trips we three took together; once
to South Carolina and a shorter excursion to the Florida East Coast.
Buddy’s curiosity was contagious. She would throw her paws up on the
dashboard, and the wonder in her eyes was compelling. In her silence she
seemed to ask, “Are we there yet?” And she would turn that petite
little head to and fro, as traffic whisked by, and familiar places gave
way to unfamiliar.
We took Our Buddy to the beach a couple of
times. A leash wasn’t necessary. Where we walked, she walked. Where we
sat, she sat. And I’ll never forget her timidity as she pitter-pattered
up to the edge of the surf. And I’ll never forget her surprise as the
cold ocean water lapped against her legs. Needless to say, she didn’t
linger, but quickly darted up onto the dry sand.
And on this
memorable day, my wife and I, and Our Little Buddy stretched ourselves
out on a large blanket, and I think we all nodded off for a spell. We’d
made plans to watch the sunrise, in the morning, on the East Coast, and
to travel to the West Coast of the state, that same day, to watch the
sunset. But fatigue changed our minds for us. We watched that
magnificent sunrise at Vero Beach and turned around and went home; my
wife, My Buddy and I.
But each of us have the opportunity to
witness a sunset more glorious than any we might have witnessed that
day. But it will be more than a casual observation of nature’s glory. We
have been given the privilege of participating in that particular
sunset.
Little Buddy was the sunrise of our lives, and she
was the sunshine of our moments. (For life is not, in fact, an
accumulation of days, but a collection of moments.) And though Our
Little Friend was denied the earthly opportunity, on that particular
day, of witnessing what assuredly would have been a magnificent sunset,
she has been privileged to participate in a grander one.
That most amazing sunset awaits all of us. And the sunrise that will follow; the more amazing still.
My Little Buddy - Excerpt. By William McDonald, PhD. Copyright 2013
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