I promise I wont spend the next days writing only about Henry. There is a side of grief that is too hard to describe and it wont make your day any better if I try. To those who wrote with such kindness to me -- messages, emails -- I thank you. I put your emails in my Henry folder. His life was way too short and his heart was way too full of love to let it all be lost with the events of yesterday. Henry will always be part of my world and your words give strength to that. He made a difference to your lives too.
Aside from the troll (who basically wastes time telling me repeatedly for years now how deranged I am, with Ed outpacing me in all aspects of insanity and stupidity, and delighting in finding evidence of this on Ocean), you've all been so very wonderful. The world really is filed with good, trusting, caring people.
I do want to add something to my Henry story that may help you understand how we got to this point. Because honestly, in the last few days I have had a hard time accepting that this was an inevitable outcome. I've had the horrible feeling that in order to protect others -- all strangers out there -- I was sacrificing him. I was letting him down. True, no one (except for the troll) would argue that he should have been given more time. That further accommodations could have been made. The risk was so high and he'd crossed the line so often, that it is a miracle that we got off with only one big bite. And no, he couldn't have been a farm dog. People come and go all the time. Workers. Family. Ed and I have witnessed first hand aroused dogs that chase bikes on rural roads. There, too, they are a terrible danger -- I'd been chased by one, Ed has been bitten by one. Henry could not live in our dense world of Amazon deliveries and school buses with children and construction workers and people coming and going at all hours of the day. I gave him time away from stressors by moving, and still he found new stressors and reacted, each time with greater force and with harsher consequences. But until I thrashed this out yet again with Ed (who is possibly the greatest advocate for animal rights that I know), I felt that I had let Henry down. To save others, I gave up my Henry Bean. After promising him that I would always love him and take care of him. That I would never abandon him or give up on him. I felt that I had broken my promise.
Ed argued strongly against this. What he said (and I agree with this now) is that I gave Henry what he needed --a good ending. That a return to a shelter, or a seizure by Public Health with a mandatory isolation, with the inevitable euthanasia for his repeated attempts to harm others, and ultimately an unprovoked biting incident -- all this would have been a thousand times worse, not only for the victim and for me as the responsible owner, but for him as well. He truly felt loved and adored until his last breath. He was with his two favorite people. It was absolutely the best we could do for him. Experts, specialists, people who understand dogs way better than I do agreed that there wasn't another path.
Reason. Okay, there's reason for you. But then there are feelings: I miss him like crazy. I see his serious face, his eyes, and I cry. I can't help it.
Did Sadey wake me or did I wake Sadey this morning? I'm not sure. The girl has been in a state of puzzlement since I picked her up yesterday. It's as if all this is good -- me, without the bother of another dog claiming rights to the couch, to the food and treats -- and yet it's not what she came to know and accept. It feels strange for her. I see it in her questioning eyes, in her sniffing out the house -- Henry's scent is everywhere and yet, he is not here. Do dogs ask the question "why?" Yes they do. They want the "why" to know what comes next. I reassure her as best as I can by acting... normal. Because Sadey my girl, this is the new normal.

The walk is good and this is the one bit of the day that gives me a huge sigh of relief. We see many kids, many people walking to school (which is just a short two blocks from Sally's House). Sadey is excited by this, but not in a negative way. If she perks up and stands on attention, wondering what's up with these people popping up suddenly, I call out "treat!" and she turns to me wagging, waiting for a handout. Which she readily gets.
At my breakfast time, Sadey takes out her antler and works away at it. She now has two to choose from. Sigh...
I take her to doggie daycare.
She needs it less than Henry did. I could crate her. I could take her to a dog park. But honestly, I need the time to be with my thoughts and feelings, and, too, I want her to continue her play with the dogs she knows and likes. Her main play buddy was always Henry, but they said she had recently branched out. Goose is there. Familiarity, repetition, continuation. She needs all of that.
From the doggie daycare, I go to the DMV to renew my drivers license which expires in a few weeks. I'd been putting it off. This and everything else it seems. The guy takes a photo for the license. I hadn't showered this morning and I'm my usual sloppy mess of these last few days. I ask him -- is it okay? He says "yes! you look happy!" I want to say to him -- no, take it again! You told me to smile, but I am not happy! I do not wish to look happy! It's fake and it doesn't do service to my beloved dog! But I don't say anything. I go to the window to go over the paperwork. She asks for my passport (for proof of citizenship), I hand her the passport, she tells me -- "that's not yours you know." Damn. I picked up Snowdrop's from our June trip. Back to Sally's House, then once more to the DMV. I'm told to look into the machine for the vision test. I can't see anything. My eyes are so puffy and hazed over that it all looks like a Russian alphabet. I take a few minutes to settle. I take some wild guesses. Enough to satisfy her. Thank God. Not only do I not need glasses for driving, they are only for clarity in reading and actually disturb my vision for anything other than a book.
She's not done with me. What color are your eyes? I had put down blue gray. You have to pick one! I don't know! I am nearly 73 years old and I dont really know the color of my eyes! And hair? I had put down brown gray. Again --you have to choose one. Ridiculous requirements! Most women dye their hair. What does it matter what color it is today? I should have said gray. I feel gray.
I spend the rest of the morning with Ed at the farmhouse. There are a bunch of showings of Sally's House today and in the next few days. I can't imagine why the sudden interest, but I need to stay away from it for now. And so the morning passes. It's good this way. The farmhouse does not remind me of Henry. Sally's House does. It's for him that I am there. Without him now.
In the afternoon I have the kids with me. First Sparrow, then Snowdrop. Both have been upset by the news of Henry, but Snowdrop has been more than upset for three days now -- she is heartbroken in ways that make it tough for anyone to help her. She knows, she understands, she doesn't challenge the outcome. But the loss just feels so enormous. Big serious dog who loved his people. And still, kids are resilient. They cry hard and recover faster than us old guys. This afternoon we do the usual: read, play, eat and even manage a big smile at pet jokes.
Eventually we pick up Sadey, who is of course eager as anything to get in the car with us. I take the kids home. Sadey and I come back to Sally's House. I'm glad it still is light outside when we return. A dark brooding house without the chaos of two large dogs playing would have been so very tough to face.
Sadey is tired after a day of play. This is good. Her best playmate isn't here to give her a lick on her nose or a soft chew on her neck. She rests next to me on the couch. Beautiful, serene, calm. I rub her ears, she sleeps.
with so much love...

























































