Something
About Harry
Old Dogs are
the Best
Dogs
By Gene
Weingarten
Sunday,
October 5,
2008; Page
W16
Not long
before his
death, Harry
and I headed
out for a
walk that
proved
eventful. He
was nearly
13, old for
a big dog.
Walks were
no longer
the
slap-happy
Iditarods of
his youth,
frenzies of
purposeless
pulling in
which we
would cast
madly off in
all
directions,
fighting for
command. Nor
were they
the
exuberant
archaeological
expeditions
of his
middle
years, when
every other
tree or
hydrant or
blade of
grass held
tantalizing
secrets
about his
neighbors.
In his old
age, Harry
had
transformed
his walk
into a
simple
process of
elimination
-- a
dutiful,
utilitarian,
head-down
trudge. When
finished, he
would
shuffle home
to his ratty
old bed,
which graced
our living
room because
Harry could
no longer
ascend the
stairs. On
these walks,
Harry seemed
oblivious to
his
surroundings,
absorbed in
the arduous
responsibility
of placing
foot before
foot before
foot before
foot. But
this time,
on the edge
of a small
urban park,
he stopped
to watch
something. A
man was
throwing a
Frisbee
to his dog.
The dog,
about
Harry's
size, was
tracking the
flight
expertly, as
Harry had
once done,
anticipating
hooks and
slices by
watching the
pitch and
roll and yaw
of the disc,
as Harry had
done, then
catching it
with a
joyful,
punctuating
leap, as
Harry had
once done,
too.
Harry sat.
For 10
minutes, he
watched the
fling and
catch, fling
and catch,
his face
contented,
his eyes
alight, his
tail
a-twitch.
Our walk
home was
almost
jaunty.
Some years
ago, the
Style
section
invited
readers to
come up with
a midlife
list of
goals for an
underachiever.
The
first-runner-up
prize went
to:
"Win the
admiration
of my dog."
It's no big
deal to love
a dog; they
make it so
easy for
you. They
find you
brilliant,
even if you
are a
witling. You
fascinate
them, even
if you are
as dull as a
butter
knife. They
are fond of
you, even if
you are a
genocidal
maniac.
Hitler
loved his
dogs, and
they loved
him.
Puppies are
incomparably
cute and
incomparably
entertaining,
and, best of
all, they
smell
exactly like
puppies. At
middle age,
a dog has
settled into
the
knuckleheaded
matrix of
behavior we
find so
appealing --
his
unquestioning
loyalty, his
irrepressible
willingness
to please,
his
infectious
happiness.
His
unequivocal
love. But it
is not until
a dog gets
old that his
most
important
virtues
ripen and
coalesce.
Old dogs can
be
cloudy-eyed
and grouchy,
gray of
muzzle,
graceless of
gait, odd of
habit, hard
of hearing,
pimply,
wheezy, lazy
and lumpy.
But to
anyone who
has ever
known an old
dog, these
flaws are of
little
consequence.
Old dogs are
vulnerable.
They show
exorbitant
gratitude
and
limitless
trust. They
are without
artifice.
They are
funny in new
and
unexpected
ways. But,
above all,
they seem at
peace.
Kafka wrote
that the
meaning of
life is that
it ends. He
meant that
our lives
are shaped
and shaded
by the
existential
terror of
knowing that
all is
finite. This
anxiety
informs
poetry,
literature,
the
monuments we
build, the
wars we
wage, the
ways we love
and hate and
procreate --
all of it.
Kafka was
talking, of
course,
about
people.
Among
animals,
only humans
are said to
be
self-aware
enough to
comprehend
the passage
of time and
the grim
truth of
mortality.
How then, to
explain old
Harry at the
edge of that
park, gray
and lame,
just days
from the
end,
experiencing
what can
only be
called
wistfulness
and
nostalgia? I
have lived
with eight
dogs,
watched six
of them grow
old and
infirm with
grace and
dignity, and
die with
what seemed
to be
acceptance.
I have seen
old dogs
grieve at
the loss of
their
friends. I
have come to
believe that
as they age,
dogs
comprehend
the passage
of time,
and, if not
the
inevitability
of death,
certainly
the
relentlessness
of the onset
of their
frailties.
They
understand
that what's
gone is
gone.
What dogs do
not have is
an abstract
sense of
fear, or a
feeling of
injustice or
entitlement.
They do not
see
themselves,
as we do, as
tragic
heroes,
battling
ceaselessly
against the
merciless
onslaught of
time. Unlike
us, old dogs
lack the
audacity to
mythologize
their lives.
You've got
to love them
for that.
At the pet
store, we
chose Harry
over two
other
puppies
because,
when
wrestling
with my
children in
the
get-acquainted
enclosure,
Harry drew
the most
blood. We
wanted a
feisty pup,
and we got
one.
It is
instructive
to watch
what happens
in a tug of
war between
a child and
a young dog
who is
equally
pigheaded,
but
stronger.
Neither
gives an
inch, which
means that,
over dozens
of days, the
child is
dragged
hundreds of
feet on his
behind.
The product
of a Kansas
puppy mill,
son of a
bitch named
Taffy Sioux,
Harry had
been sold to
us as a
yellow
Labrador
retriever. I
suppose it
was
technically
true, but
only in the
sense that
Tic Tacs are
technically
"food."
Harry's
lineage was
suspect. He
wasn't the
square-headed,
shiny,
elegant type
of Labrador
you can
envision in
the wilds of
Canada
hunting for
ducks. He
was the
shape of a
baked
potato, with
the color
and luster
of an
interoffice
envelope.
You could
envision him
in the wilds
of suburban
Toledo,
hunting for
nuggets of
dried food
in a carpet.
His full
name was
Harry S
Truman,
and once
he'd reached
middle age,
he had
indeed
developed
the
unassuming
soul of a
haberdasher.
We sometimes
called him
Tru, which
fit his
loyalty but
was in other
ways a
misnomer:
Harry was a
bit of an
eccentric, a
few bubbles
off plumb.
Though he
had never
experienced
an
electrical
shock,
whenever he
encountered
a wire on
the floor --
say, a power
cord leading
from a
laptop to a
wall socket
-- Harry
would stop
and refuse
to proceed.
To him, this
barrier was
as
impassable
as the
Himalayas.
He'd stand
there,
waiting for
someone to
move it.
Also, he was
afraid of
wind.
While Harry
lacked the
wiliness and
cunning of
some dogs, I
did watch
one day as
he figured
out a basic
principle of
physics. He
was playing
with a water
bottle in
our back
yard -- it
was one of
those
five-gallon
cylindrical
plastic jugs
from the top
of a water
cooler. At
one point,
it rolled
down a hill,
which
surprised
and
delighted
him. He
retrieved
it, brought
it back up
and tried to
make it go
down again.
It wouldn't.
I watched
him nudge it
around until
he
discovered
that for the
bottle to
roll, its
long axis
had to be
perpendicular
to the slope
of the hill.
You could
see the
understanding
dawn on his
face; it was
Archimedes
in his bath,
Helen Keller
at the water
spigot.
That was
probably the
intellectual
achievement
of Harry's
life,
tarnished
only
slightly by
the fact
that he
spent the
next two
hours
insipidly
entranced,
rolling the
bottle down
and hauling
it back up.
He did not
come inside
until it
grew too
dark for him
to see.
I believe I
know exactly
when Harry
became an
old dog. He
was about 9
years old.
It happened
at 10:15 on
the evening
of June 21,
2001, the
day my
family moved
from the
suburbs to
the city.
The move
took longer
than we'd
anticipated.
Inexcusably,
Harry had
been left
alone in the
vacated
house --
eerie,
echoing,
empty of
furniture
and of all
belongings
except Harry
and his
bed-- for
eight hours.
When I
arrived to
pick him up,
he was
beyond
frantic.
He met me at
the door and
embraced me
around the
waist in a
way that is
not
immediately
reconcilable
with the
musculature
and skeleton
of a dog's
front legs.
I could not
extricate
myself from
his grasp.
We walked
out of that
house like a
slow-dancing
couple, and
Harry did
not let go
until I
opened the
car door.
He wasn't
barking at
me in
reprimand,
as he once
might have
done. He
hadn't
fouled the
house in
spite. That
night, Harry
was simply
scared and
vulnerable,
impossibly
sweet and
needy and
grateful. He
had lost
something of
himself, but
he had
gained
something
more
touching and
more
valuable. He
had entered
old age.
Some people
who seem
unmoved by
the deaths
of tens of
thousands
through war
or natural
disaster
will
nonetheless
summon
outrage over
the
mistreatment
of animals,
and they
will grieve
inconsolably
over the
loss of the
family dog.
People who
find this
behavior
distasteful
are often
the ones
without
pets. It is
hard to
understand,
in the
abstract,
the degree
to which a
companion
animal,
particularly
after a long
life,
becomes a
part of you.
I believe
I've figured
out what
this is all
about. It is
not as noble
as I'd like
it to be,
but it is
not anything
of which to
be ashamed,
either.
In our dogs,
we see
ourselves.
Dogs exhibit
almost all
of our
emotions; if
you think a
dog cannot
register
envy or pity
or pride or
melancholia,
you have
never lived
with one for
any length
of time.
What dogs
lack is our
ability to
dissimulate.
They wear
their
emotions
nakedly, and
so, in
watching
them, we see
ourselves as
we would be
if we were
stripped of
posture and
pretense.
Their
innocence is
enormously
appealing.
When we
watch a dog
progress
from
puppyhood to
old age, we
are watching
our own
lives in
microcosm.
Our dogs
become old,
frail,
crotchety
and
vulnerable,
just as
Grandma did,
just as we
surely will,
come the
day. When we
grieve for
them, we
grieve for
ourselves.
The meaning
of life is
that it
ends.
In the year
after our
move, Harry
began to age
visibly, and
he did it
the way most
dogs do.
First his
muzzle began
to whiten,
and then the
white slowly
crept
backward to
swallow his
entire head.
Pink nose,
white head,
tan flanks
-- he looked
like a
stubby
kitchen
match. As he
became more
sedentary,
he thickened
a bit, too.
I remember
reading an
article once
about people
who raised
dogs for
food in
Asia. A dog
rancher was
indignantly
defending
his
profession,
saying that
he used only
"basic
yellow
dogs." As I
looked down
at Harry,
asleep as
usual, all I
could think
of was:
meat.
But Harry's
physical
decline was
accompanied
by what I
will call,
at the risk
of ridicule,
a spiritual
awakening. A
dog's
greatest
intelligence
is said to
be his
innate
ability to
anticipate
and
comprehend
human
feelings and
actions.
It's
supposedly a
Darwinian
adaptation
-- dogs need
our alliance
in order to
survive. In
earlier
years, Harry
had never
shown any
particular
gift for
empathy, but
as the
breadth of
his
interests
dwindled,
and his
world
contracted,
he seemed to
watch us
more
closely. My
wife, who is
a lawyer,
also acts in
community
theater. One
day, she was
in the house
rehearsing a
monologue
for an
upcoming
audition.
The lines
were from
Marsha
Norman's
two-person
play
"'Night,
Mother,"
about a
housewife
who is
attempting
to talk her
adult
daughter out
of suicide.
Thelma is a
weak and
bewildered
woman trying
to change
her
daughter's
mind while
coming to
terms with
her own
failings as
a mother and
with her
paralyzing
fear of
being left
alone. Her
lines are
excruciating.
My wife had
to stop in
mid-monologue.
Harry was
too
distraught.
He could
understand
not one word
she was
saying, but
he figured
out that Mom
was as sad
as he'd ever
seen her. He
was
whimpering,
pawing at
her knee,
licking her
hand, trying
as best he
could to
make things
better. You
don't need a
brain to
have a
heart.
Harry was
always
terrified of
thunderstorms,
but as he
aged and his
hearing
waned, as if
in a benign
collusion of
natural
forces, this
terror
subsided. He
became a
calmer dog
in general,
if a far
more
eccentric
one.
On walks, he
would no
longer
bother to
scout and
circle for a
place to
relieve
himself. He
would simply
do it in
mid-plod,
like a
horse,
leaving the
difficult
logistics of
drive-by
cleanup to
me.
Sometimes,
while
crossing a
busy street,
with cars
whizzing by,
he would
plop down to
scratch his
ear.
Sometimes,
he would
forget where
he was and
why he was
there. To
the
amusement of
passersby, I
would have
to hunker
down beside
him and say,
"Harry,
we're on a
walk, and
we're going
home now.
Home is this
way, okay?"
On these
dutiful
walks, Harry
ignored
almost
everything
he passed.
The most
notable
exception
was an old,
barrel-chested
female pit
bull named
Honey, whom
he loved.
This was
surprising,
both because
other dogs
had long ago
ceased to
interest
Harry at
all, and
because even
back when
they did,
Harry's
tastes were
for the
guys. Though
he was
neutered,
Harry's
sexual
preference
was pretty
evident.
But when we
met Honey on
walks, Harry
perked up.
Honey was
younger by
five years
and heartier
by a mile,
but she
liked Harry
and slowed
her gait
when he was
around. They
waddled
together for
blocks, eyes
forward,
hardly
interacting
but content
in each
other's
company.
Harry
reminded me
of an old
gay man who,
at the end
of his life,
returns to
his wife to
end their
time
together on
a porch
swing under
an
embroidered
lap shawl. I
will forever
be grateful
to Honey for
sweetening
Harry's last
days.
I work
mostly at
home, which
means that
during the
weekdays
Harry and I
shared an
otherwise
empty house.
Mostly, he
slept;
mostly I
wrote and
paced, and
my pacing
often took
me past his
lump on the
floor. I
would always
mutter,
almost
unconsciously,
"Hey,
Harry," and
he would
always
respond in
the same
fashion: His
body would
move not at
all, but his
tail would
thud,
exactly
once,
against the
floor.
I didn't
really know
how
important
that ritual
was until
there was no
thud
anymore.
One night at
3 a.m., a
smoke
detector in
our house
began to
bleep in
that
water-torture
way,
signaling
that it
needed a new
battery. It
was mildly
annoying,
but to Harry
it appeared
to be a sign
of the
Apocalypse.
He began
pacing and
panting, and
actually
tried
climbing our
stairwell to
hide under
our bed. His
rheumy legs
buckled; we
caught him
before he
fell.
So I mounted
a ladder,
disconnected
the bleeping
thing, and
took out the
spent
battery.
Then my wife
spent two
hours
talking
Harry down
into a
semi-sane
condition.
She slept on
the floor by
his side.
It turned
out to be
Harry's
final
eccentricity.
When he
awoke the
next
morning, he
could no
longer use
his hind
legs, and we
trundled him
off to the
vet. Harry
had timed
his
departure
thoughtfully.
Had he
waited a few
more hours,
my daughter
would have
been unable
to hug him
and tell him
what a good
boy he had
been. She
had known
and loved
Harry more
than half of
her life,
and I
believe this
was not
incidental
to her
choice of
career. She
was leaving,
that next
morning, for
her first
day of
veterinary
school.
For nearly a
week after
Harry's
death, my
wife and I
shared a
knowledge
that we left
unspoken,
even to each
other. It
was simply
too
heart-wrenching
to say out
loud.
As he lay on
the gurney
and the
doctor began
to push the
poison into
his vein,
Harry had
lifted up
his head and
kissed us
goodbye.