Summer Rehash October 13, 1996
Summer time may be over for you, but it’s 85 degrees here today! Just spent my morning with 30 greyhounds on their way to Idaho. Sunnie and Ajar stayed behind to join the Greyhound Gang. All five are sacked out after baths. They hate me when I do that to them! Rode for 3 hours yesterday through clefted canyons, and am still tingling. Have to get my horse next! Here’s some verbal masturbation from this summer. Call, write, visit!
Tomato Sandwiches
I planted my first garden this year, and I have growing things in it!
I harvested my first tomato, and I will be making a tomato sandwich for lunch today. Tomato sandwiches make me think about my grandma, whose garden I spent hours in, pulling off tomatoes, biting into them while sitting in the garden dirt and letting the red juice and seeds dribble down my chin and into my hands. I could sit and eat tomatoes all day back then. And I think of my dad, and the marigolds he’d plant around his garden, and the weeding he’d do, and the watering he’d make me do. The smell of the tomato plants, the picking of the fruit they made, the putting of them in a basket, and the putting of them in my mouth.
A lady who almost adopted a greyhound gave me herb plants. And boy did they grow. I have two rows of parsley. But grow is all they did, since I don’t have the foggiest notion of what to do with them! Though I do run my hands through them and capture the smell.
Dog Walking
When I walk the dogs before I go to bed at night, and there’s no moon, the red rocks that surround this town look like ghostly mountains out of time. They appear against the backdrop of the black, star dotted sky, and I swear I see temples from Ancient Egypt, and entrances to vast sphinx like tombstones. Does this mean I’m being buried in Kanab?
This morning, just like every other early morning, the dogs thought I should get up and take them for a walk. So though I was buried under covers and pillows, they managed to stick their long wet noses under all covers. They get gleeful pleasure in rubbing these long noses incessantly and insistently, on my back, in my arm pits, on my head, anywhere they can get to, until I get out of bed and give them their walk wish.
Hiking with six dogs this morning, I let them all off leash. And they cavorted and gavotted and ran and walked and demonstrated yet again, what living is all about.
Dead Dog
Floppy, in his physical being passed away today. Floppy had lived and slept with me for over 40 years. He’d been patched and hugged and loved. And he met his physical death ignominiously, when Maybelline, a high spirited, stuffed animal loving, young greyhound, took him in her mouth, and tore him to pieces. He’s all over my floor, in bits and pieces, because my vacuum is not working. I guess it’s kind of like spreading ashes, but it’s sawdust and stuffing. And I feel like I’ve failed him by not protecting him from the world, when he protected me from everything for so many years.
ODE TO FLOPPY Written 1991
I needed an operation. I have fibroid tumors in my uterus. Pulsing, growing masses of pulpy muscle tissue. Chomping through my uterine lining.
Male doctors in NY want to take out all my female parts, a hysterectomy. After all, I'm 35, not married, and it doesn't appear that I'll be producing babies. They flourished a paper for me to sign absolving them of guilt. I walked out of their offices, and headed to the library. In the library I found a book by a Californian female doctor that stated that hysterectomies are only needed when cancer has taken residence. Pulpy muscle tissue masses can be removed and female organs can stay intact. I called her office, sent her all my medical records and booked the flight. I would fly to California for Female Reconstructive Therapy.
I'd never needed an operation before and here I was, going to LA, for major surgery. My mom hates to fly, and my sister had a job she couldn't leave. I knew I needed someone with me to be my support. So when I got on the plane, so did Floppy.
Floppy traveled with me in an open blue canvas sailing bag. He's 3 feet long, brown with multi-colored and multitudinal patches sewn over the last 34 years by me on his long, oblong body. One foot is clubbed, one eye is missing, one ear is torn. He's slept in my arms, listened to everything I've said and cried with me. He'd was to be my link to home, my anchor through the operation.
When I got to LA, I spent two days in the doctor's headquarters, watching tapes of the operation, reading about it and meeting with the doctor. Her arrogance was staggering., but that was OK with me. She knew she knew her stuff, and I knew she knew her stuff. And that was all I wanted. Someone who would take these masses of muscle out of me, and leave me whole. If, during our sessions, she wanted to discuss what kind of car to buy, or how she dated Mark Harmon, I'd follow her lead. During the operation, I'd be trusting her explicitly.
I had to check into the hospital the night before the operation. At 7pm, my girlfriend, Fran, went with me to drop off my belongings. When we got to the room, there were two beds. A made one near the door, and a unmade one near the window. I wanted the window view, so I placed Floppy, a Get Well balloon and my herb sleep pillow on the egg carton mattress of the unmade bed. My toiletries and clothes were placed on the chair beside it. Fran and I left for dinner.
About 9:30pm, I returned, alone. Walking into the hospital room, I saw that both beds were now identically made, but Floppy was gone. I walked out to the nurses' station, and quietly asked where my dog might be.
They said, "Oh, housekeeping must have picked it up". We'll call them and get back to you."
I dutifully returned to my room to wait. At 10:30, I went back to the nurses' station.
"Excuse me, I'm still waiting for my dog," I inquired. "Also", I went on, "a Get Well Balloon and my herb sleeping pillow are gone, too." The nurse stared at me. "Housekeeping is closed for the night. We'll check with them in the morning. Now you need to go to your room, and go to bed."
I hesitated, not wanting to make a big deal over this, but Floppy was a big deal to me, as was the operation next morning.
"I understand," I replied, "but couldn't someone just go to housekeeping and get him for me. I've traveled 3000 miles for an operation and no one is with me but Floppy and I'd really like to have him with me tonight. Also, my operation is tomorrow morning, and I won't be around to get him back."
She again stared fiercely at me. " Go back to you r room, someone will be right there."
It took more than 1/2 hour for someone to come. By then I'd parked my chair in the doorway and made myself very visible. This time they were not going to forget to send someone to see me.
It was after 11pm and I had started to cry. Something was wrong. How hard could it be to get my dog back? My Floppy, who had traveled here with me to give me support and make sure I made it through the operation safely. Nurses walked up and down the hallway, dispensing medicines and care to others on the floor. They barely glanced my way. Suddenly, there were three of them in front of me, asking me to please move the chair back into the room and go to bed. With tears streaming down my cheeks, they followed me into the room.
"The housekeeper thought the prior patient had left the dog and other things on the bed. So she wrapped it all up in the egg carton mattress and put it into the compactor."
My brain froze. A compactor? What did that mean?
"I'm sorry, I don't understand what you are saying to me. Why don't you just get him out? I can certainly go to this compactor and remove him, as I know you have more important things to do. But don't you understand how important he is to me?" And the tears started anew.
"Honey," a nurse who'd just come on the shift said, "he's been compacted. We can't get him out. There are yards of waste materials in that compactor. Now you have to calm down and go to sleep. You've got an operation tomorrow."
With that they left. I closed the door and balled. Balled for all the years Floppy had given to me, for me dragging him out here, and for his ignoble demise. To be squashed in a compactor with medical waste. The balling turned to anger, as my brain started functioning. Why hadn't they told me sooner? If they'd really called Housekeeping, why couldn't Floppy have been taken out before things were compacted. I had to see for myself. I wasn't going to just accept what they said. After all, I hadn't accepted what the doctors had said I needed back in the East.
I made up my bed so it looked like I was sleeping in it. I opened the door, carefully and quietly, and when the nurses were all engaged in their business, I snuck down the hall. I had no idea where I was going. But I had to know the truth about Floppy. I found a door at the end of the hallway. I was 8 floors up. I ran down them. At ground level, I opened the door to find a police car sitting at the curb. I hurriedly closed the door. Would he stop me? Did I have a choice? So I slipped open the door, placed a rock in the jam, and walked nonchalantly past him and into the bowels of the hospital's basement level. I didn't know what I was looking for, but suddenly there it was in front of me. A door marked "Housekeeping". I went to the door and knocked. A very surprised Spanish lady opened the door. On her desk was the balloon and the pillow. I pointed at the stuff and yelled, "My dog, where's my dog". In her broken English, she told me the dog was gone. I asked her to show me the compactor. She didn't want to, but my tears persuaded her.
She brought me to an area where a blue iron trash bin, 30 feet by 10 feet by 7 feet, resided. She shook her head, sorrow etched on her face, when she saw the tremors coursing my face. If Floppy was in there, he was dead. But I couldn’t let him go. I climbed up on this blue monster and down on three feet deep of trash that had not yet been compacted. I jumped into the monster’s bowels and hauled out every piece of that trash. Kotex, swabs, hospital gowns, remnants of food not eaten, even needles and medicine. I searched it all. Floppy was not there, wrapped in his protective egg carton mattress. He was compacted.
I stumbled back to my room. Numb. I changed into my sterile gown, fell into bed, pulled the covers over my head and stuffing my face into the pillow, just balled. I'd seen it with my own eyes. Floppy was gone. I'd had him for 33 years, and I'd brought him out here to provide solace for me, but all I'd done was bring him to his death. . Floppy was my Velveteen Rabbit. He knew all my secrets. He loved me when others had not. He was my rock. My confidant. My dog. And he was buried forever amid tons of medical waste.
It was 3 am and more nurses appeared at the foot of my bed. They tried to give me sleeping pills. They told me that I was too distraught and if I didn't stop crying and get some sleep the operation would not happen. I glared at them with clenched teeth, red eyes and cheeks worn with crying.
"I will NOT take your pills. And you will not prevent me from having this operation. It is why I'm here, it's why Floppy is gone, and I will have this operation tomorrow morning."
I fell into an exhausted sleep. There was nothing left to do. The reality was that Floppy was gone . And I had to let him go.
Addendum: The head housekeeper went to the dump with the truck and picked Floppy out of all the waste. When I came out of
my operation, he was waiting for me.
Type A personality.
I left the East coast to get away from my Type A personality, but it found me here, tucked away among red rocks and Mormons. There’s no escaping who you are. It always finds you and slaps you right in the face. “Thought you could get rid of me”, it says, “I don’t think so.”
I’ve been working 15 hours day, preparing for 800 women at a STAMPIN' UP! convention in Las Vegas. It will be a monster. And I will be very glad when it is over, and I will be taking a nice long vacation, and enjoying myself somewhere else.
And I took my vacation with my sister in Montana. We drove around to every grocery store in Billings looking for Good Humor Toasted Almond ice cream bars. There wasn’t one in the entire city. I had three bad dreams. I was on location for a plane crash. Then on location for a train crash. And then right there when a shark attacked everyone in the water, and by brother was in the water. (He lived)
Tunes
I’m doing the driving thing, which I love, and surfing for tunes on the radio. And Maybe I’m Amazed comes on - and I flash back to Glenn, my first love, and the watch I bought him when I traveled cross country in Switzerland, and had engraved with “Maybe I’m Amazed” on it. And for the next hour, I’m lost in the reveries of that first love, and first loss. But I mostly remember the love.
And then Heatwave comes on, and it’s me on my first cross country trip at 27. Playing that song over and over again, and just groovin, and telling myself that if I ever get married, I’m going to wear a red dress, and have this song playing!
I pop in a tape from that cross country trip - it’s 16 years old. The tape is Jean-Pierre Rampal - a flutist and pianist - and that music evokes the solitary drive I took, and the wonders that unfold on the road. The lone buffalo in South Dakota. The moose, head down in the he reeds. The brother and sister in full baseball regalia, playing catch.
Family
My mom, dad and sister came to visit for a week. They stayed in the beautiful guest house su casa Presto. We ate pecan sandies, almond roca, apples, subway, pizza hut, pistachio nuts. We played pinochle every day and the team of dad and me whipped the other two’s butts. We drove around the area. We made gagging noises because Lad farted all the time. We played golf every day. And then when we went to Mesquite to drop off my parents for a week of senior citizen gambling, and my sister hit the poker video machine for $1250! She is very lucky in cards. No comment about love.
Greyhound Update
It’s that time of year, and I still continue to need your on-going support. Your donations this year have been the mainstay of the organization. Here is a year-to-date high level report of moneys spent.
Twenty four dogs placed $2255
Seven re-placed $ 150
Donations $1865
Total Income $4270
Total Expenses $9385
Debt ($5115)
Miko
Miko had been passed around. Her current residence, in Salt Lake, meant that she was tied up all day long with no attention or love. Her prior lives were as a breeder, living outside. So shy initially, she lived behind my chair for two days. But once she trusted, she was Little Miss Playful. She’s now living, happily, with another greyhound, Buddy, in Las Vegas.
Mickey
When I first saw Mickey, I renamed him “Wooly-Booly”. (Sam the Sham and the Pharoahs, anyone?) He had no hair on his spine, compliments of a raging skin disease and then soft tufts of black, yellow and brown hair covering his sides. He ran to me, smiling and showing off his two inch overbite, his little ears, and odd shaped head. Anyone that came to the house was treated to ferocious barking and teeth baring - the first greyhound guard dog! Behind that first impression was the most loving, sweet stud muffin to come through the Greyhound Gang’s doors. He’d stretch himself out on my bed, pretending to be my bed warmer (in 90 degree heat), follow me everywhere and do whatever I commanded. He’s now the king in a household of 2 Doberman girls and 2 Siamese babes.
Lad
Laddie was a handful the first month. Unwanted at 6 years old, he’s a macho black boy. Only 2/3 of tail, not cat safe, not little kid safe, can’t be left alone, he marked my house, secretly, for the first month. Puts food in his mouth, carries it somewhere else and drops it! Nine teeth pulled. I nicknamed him Freight Train, as he is so powerful he just does whatever he wants. But now I call him Soul Train, cause he gives me these looks that just make me cry.
None of these dogs would be alive today if it weren’t for your on-going support of the Greyhound Gang. Thank you!
Labels: claudia, journey, life you save