Juno – Dreaming of Heaven

Shortly after Juno died someone told me I’d dream of her. What this person actually said was that she would visit me in my dreams. I didn’t believe. Even now it’s still hard to take in. But last night, less than three weeks after her death, it happened.

The edges are fuzzy and the transitions are abrupt. I only remember the end, the most important part. That’s how I dream. Things don’t connect well or make any sense. Then suddenly there’s a sequence that does, one that makes perfect sense, a bit of wisdom that breaks clearly through to waking life.

I was in a house, an old mansion with dark heavy wood, the sturdy kind that lasts centuries. It was cool and grey outside, like fall in the Midwest, not unpleasant, but not particularly pleasant either. There were many buildings on the grounds, hidden passages and walkways. There were other people around. None talked to me. I was a stranger and I’d traveled there alone. I was looking for Juno.

When I first saw her I thought it was a trick of the eye. In the waking world I sometimes see her just on the edge of vision, a flash of gold, a flick of her feathered tail. I saw her run back up to the front door like that just moments after our vet carried her body away. That was the first time. Since then, I only catch her in glimpses, hints of who she used to be, stretched out where she used to sleep, trotting up the walk with her ears forward and her tail high. I know Tim sees her too. It only lasts a second. But in the dream it was different.

Juno was walking on a stone path, a covered walkway 10 feet up connecting two buildings. I ran to her and she turned and came to me. Her fur was different, lighter, curlier, but I knew it was Juno. I can prove it’s her, I thought, I will find the scars. I searched her leg and parted her fur looking for the gnarled lines from two surgeries. They were not the same, so light and thin now, hard to see, even harder to feel. She lay still while I petted her belly and cried for the joy of seeing her again. I guess that’s when I noticed. The scars were faded. But the lumps were missing altogether, no angry tightly stretched tumors. She was smooth and soft and sweet smelling. The cancer was gone.

People started to notice us. I never asked but they knew I wanted to take her. We gathered in a room where Juno lived, high stone walls and heavy wood beams, old-style sofas and a perfect roaring fire. Juno settled down in a corner, while a smaller dog snoozed on one of the sofas. I couldn’t imagine how many people lived there; so many kept coming in. They were here to listen to me make my case, to tell the story of my life with this dog, the dog they now called Vivian. When I awoke the name made such sense, the Latin root: “full of life.”

My mother has never spoken to me in a dream until this one. A man had brushed up against me and she took my arm and said “He just tried to pick your pocket.” “No,” I said, “I didn’t even bring my wallet.” And we laughed. All that relates to an inside joke that my mom never knew about in life. I guess she knows now and thinks it’s funny. I only mention it because those were the only words spoken in the dream.

I never got to speak. I never made my case to bring Juno home. I guess that’s because she was already there. The last time I saw her she was sleeping just around the corner from the smaller dog on the sofa. The fire was warm and strong. She was with good people who loved her, people who had named her well.

Dear Juno

I can’t believe it’s been a year.

Tim and I miss you deeply.  Still, I’m so grateful when you visit my dreams, even the ones in which you just pass through for a short cameo appearance.  Those are as precious as our memories of you.

So much has changed this past year, and so many of those changes have been inspired by your spirit.  Once again, I’m helping people full-time with their dogs.  All of them want what we had, a meaningful and abiding relationship, clear communication, love and affection.  Every time I succeed, I thank you.  You taught me so much.

Juno (1998-2009)

I wake up every day to your picture on my dresser, and your paw print on my nightstand.  Tim and I live with two dogs now who came from pretty bad situations.  Stella reminds me a lot of you, serious at times, an old soul.  You would like her, unless it turned out you were too much alike.  Stewie is small, flighty and impetuous.  He needs one of those scary “air bites” you reserved for your favorite puppies.  I think you might like him anyway, mostly because he means so much to Tim.

Auntie Gay looks after them both, and Stosh.  She also tends to your special place in the garden.  There’s a pretty bouquet of fresh fall flowers there today.  I know she misses you too.

I speak of you often, Juno.  Though, today it will be difficult.  Tears are still too near the surface.  Tonight I’ll teach a week-one Good Manners class, just as you and I did so many times.  Stella will play your part, admirably for a 16 month old puppy.  She won’t have your flare; she won’t get the laughs you did, but she’ll do fine.  I’ll teach the class, and take care not to call her by your name.  I’ll teach the class, and take care not to tell a story that would make me cry.  I’ll teach it the way we used to, and in my heart I will dedicate the class to you.

Love, Daddy Michael

Stewie, A Small Tribute

 

Michael Baugh, CPDT-KA, CDBC

Looks aren’t everything, but they count.  And, for the record, size does matter.

Stewie is cute, and Stewie is small.  If he were a beast of lesser aesthetic value or greater mass, he’d be in trouble, maybe dead, or worse.

Stewie the day he was found

He’d just dodged death when I met him.  Death might have been a Dodge, in fact, or a Chrysler.  Whatever it was, it had passed, and Stewie had made it across the street.  It was raining.  Stewie was pathetic, and helpless, and adorable.  What happened to you little guy, I said.  He looked up, wide-Chihuahua-eyed, soaked and trembling the length of his Dachshund body.  I’ll take you home.

He was good at first, good in a magical way, good in a too-good-to-be-true way.  He was cute too, and small, so small.  He took a bath that first night, ate a meal, and burrowed under the covers to pass the night with me.  What a find.

The jumping isn’t a big deal really.  It’s the claws, just shy of being garden rakes that are a big deal.  Trimming them is a big deal too, a big, ugly, dramatic deal.  The little puddle in the bathroom wasn’t a big deal either.  The pile in the entry way was (both times), and much bigger than you’d expect from such a dog, so cute and small.  Chewing a bone anywhere near our other dog is a big deal, too, a big nasty deal.  These are all problems you can manage with crate training.  The crate is a big deal, an ear-splitting, crying, like from the gates of hell big deal.  Baby gate?  Climbed it.  Pooped again.  What a find.

Another thunderstorm rolls in, and Stewie burrows under the pillows on the sofa next to me.  He shakes, and I stroke his back.  He’s so cute, so small.  What happened to you? I can only guess.  No one taught him how to survive humans, unseemly and uncaring, despite our clever large brains.  Eventually, the cuteness wore off.  The problems were too big.  He ended up on the street, wet and terrified in a storm, inches from death.  That’s how I imagine it.

Then, he found me, slunk into my car, burrowed beneath my covers and into my heart.  I wonder for a moment about the others, the under-bite dogs with dark faces, the ones not-so-small, the mud-pawed jumpers and the shedders.  What happens to them?  Who saves them from the storm?  Who teaches them that some of us are okay, clever but still kind?

Originally posted in October 2010. 2022 updates: Stewie’s behavior issues were resolved within his first year. He is now a delightful old dog, still so full of life. Though he appeared, at first, to be a Chihuahua – Dachshund mix, he is actually 50/50 Chihuahua – Cocker Spaniel.