It has been quite a day. The original plan was for my wife and I to spend the morning singing at Faith Lutheran Church (where I used to be an accompanist). Before the service started, our son texted me: “You guys need to take her today to the vet, she is still shitting blood.”
My son is referring to our little Australian shepherd. On Friday, she started having bloody stools. When we called the vet two days ago, we were instructed to switch her to a bland diet and monitor her until Monday. She had diarrhea and threw up twice this morning when my wife took her out.
So, we called the emergency vet number, and, by 11 a.m., we were on our way to the clinic, with the worst-case scenarios running through our heads. Intestinal blockage. Swallowed needle. Advanced leukemia. I was literally preparing myself for euthanizing her.
Marie Howe writes about death . . .
Persephone and Demeter
by: Marie Howe
My mother needn’t have pretended to be appalled,
she knows all about the under dark.
The seed must break open to rise.
My mother is a god; she wanted to spare me.
But my nature is nature.
Like everything alive I was meant to be split open,
to blossom, to be sucked, to be eaten,
to lean, to bend, to wither,
to die and die and die until I died.
Marie Howe understands that death and life go hand-in-hand. Autumn always follows spring and summer. The world leans, bends, and withers. Pretty soon, snow starts flying, and winter arrives, burying us all until everything starts over again.
Our puppy is fine. The vet weighed her, palpated her belly, listened to her lungs. Then he gave her a shot and some pills to help with the nausea and runny poop. He thinks she’s dealing with some gastrointestinal bug. So, it’s bland food for another couple days. If she’s not better by Tuesday, we have to bring her back in for further testing. No emergency surgery. No grim diagnosis.
The rest of the day was all about grocery shopping, preparing for a poetry workshop, and watching the closing ceremonies of the Winter Olympics in Italy. Not a bad way to while away the hours as the snow kept piling and piling and piling up. We’ve gotten close to two feet since Wednesday. (In case you’re wondering, I’m officially tired of winter.)
I did lead that Zoom poetry workshop this evening, and it was wonderful. Not surprisingly, a few of my prompts had to do with death and loss and grief. Marie Howe would probably have enjoyed it a lot.
Now, I’m getting ready for bed. There’s no ice skating or skiing or luging to watch. I have a busy week ahead of me with teaching and programming. Plus, I have a puppy to worry about now, and the sky’s supposed to dump another six inches of that white shit on us overnight. But no death in the near future as far as I know.
Saint Marty wrote a poem for this evening about snow . . .
Winter Nocturne
by: Martin Achatz
No moon. Sky just a bruise,
gray and blue, like a palm
held to a flashlight so
you can almost see vein and bone.
Snow falling up with wind, my
neighbor’s Great Dane Martha
chewing the air with barks, bays,
I stand in this ice cube, think
about the 7 and 7s my dad
drank after supper until bed
every night, the cubes in
his cup rattling like loose
teeth in a boxer’s mouth.



