Jake

I’m going to tell you about a life.

Somewhere in the middle of July, 2000, a puppy was born.

I didn’t know about him at the time. I wasn’t even thinking about puppies. I had no plans to get a puppy.

That’s just as well as, due to a few complications, this particular puppy – who luckily came into the care of the no-kill Denver Puppy Rescue – wasn’t eligible for adoption at the normal age. It was several months before he could meet any potential owners.

And, sad to say (though lucky for me), many of those potential owners weren’t interested in a puppy who, at five months old, already weighed in at over fifty pounds. “Black Lab/Great Dane(?) Mix” read the tag on the outside of the kennel. It wasn’t a label that promised a unobtrusive pet.

December, 2000. I’m ‘encouraged’ to go get a dog. I meet Jake.

That was his name. Jake. I knew it as soon as I saw him: literally looked through the kennel door, turned around and said “This is Jake. He’s coming home with me today.”

Now, I’ve been around dogs since before I could walk — my family has always had a dog, through never two — but for all that, I’ve never really had a dog of my own. They’ve always been Dad’s dog or the family’s dog or just general ‘belongs to the farm’ dogs. I’m definitely a dog guy, but I’d never had my own.

So, almost thirty, I got my first puppy.

My townhouse hadn’t seemed small until he moved in, nor had the lack of a fenced yard bothered me, but that all changed. By the time Jake hit his first birthday, the papers were signed and I was moving into the house I still call home today. Corner lot. Huge backyard. Great dog-friendly neighborhood.

In a way – a very obvious way – I got the house for him… or at least because of him. Which I consider a good thing. It was worth it. I love the house, too.

Dog Years

People like to talk about dog years. “He’s 70 in dog years,” they say, as though our pets have somehow learned to compress time. They haven’t. The fact of the matter is this:

A year is a year. It has a set number of days, an immutable number of hours, you only get so many of them before your friend is gone, and you will never, not ever, manage to make it feel as though that limited time was enough — that you didn’t somehow waste it.

Dogs can’t compress time; they extract more from each tick of the clock by putting more into it. More happiness. More enthuasism. More excitement. More chewed shoes. More smiles.

More love, per minute, than a living creature should be able to manage, and maybe the big dogs even more than that.

Maybe that’s why they’re gone so fast.

Training

I realized early on with Jake that my exposure to herding and hunting dogs throughout my childhood had instilled a bone-deep belief that “good dogs” meant “well-trained dogs.” I still believe that, probably even more so, and back when Jake was a puppy, we dove into training head first. Big puppies need good training so they still mind when they’re full grown. Some dogs are stubborn, or simply don’t take to training well.

Jake was not one of those dogs. Our trainer, who didn’t particularly like Jake’s “look” (she had something like seven German Shepherds at the time), ran out of things to teach him about two-thirds of the way through our sessions, and had to resort to teaching him ‘tricks’ (she said, distastefully) like shaking hands, fancy begging, and more complex movement commands. The basic list (sit, stay, outside, kennel, quiet, up) doubled, then tripled, then he started guessing what we wanted before we’d finished demonstrating it. It was easy, for him and me. It was fun.

“He’s…” the trainer shook her head at our last session, then turned to him. “You’re going to be a pretty good dog, Jake.”

And he was. Ninety pounds of eternal puppy, once he’d finished growing. Big for a lab, maybe small for whatever else he was. Perfectly Jake-sized. On his back feet, he could rest his paws on my chest (only when given permission) and ‘kiss’ me with a tongue roughly the size of a damp bath sheet.

Somewhere along the line, we started calling him Jakemus Maximus, as though he were a Roman general.

We got dog food in bags that weighed half as much as he did, used a water bowl the size of a small dutch oven, and bought rawhides in bulk from CostCo to keep him from eating the dining room table.

Funny story about that table. I tied him to the leg one time, at Halloween, so he wouldn’t rush in and lick the faces of trick or treaters all night.

First time the door opened, he rushed anyway and snapped the leg of the table (oak, about six months old) clean off. Like it wasn’t even there. He loved meeting new people.

Our Family

In 2002, we got him a puppy of his own, because he had more energy than a household of people could bleed off.

Dizzy didn’t train as fast as Jake, but to be fair she never needed to — I’d give a command, and she’d simply look at Jake and copy him. When he ran, she ran. When he went to his kennel, she went to hers. When he barked at strangers, she followed suit.

“Sorry about that,” I murmured to the local sherrif’s deputy, who’d dropped by to explain some flashing lights down the street. Jake didn’t like his sunglasses. (Never liked smokers either. Good boy.)

“Don’t be,” said the deputy. “That’s a good dog. That’s a dog that’ll keep your house safe.”

And our family. Our friend’s baby girl would waddle up to Jake, grab his ears, and use them to pull herself onto his back.

Jake just sighed and grinned. “Kids,” you could hear him say. “But what can you do?”

You might mistake him for harmless. I did, sometimes.

Once, my nephew (who lived with us, about 11 years old at the time) ran out to the garage to get something from my car. He left the door open.

A dog, walking by the house, went a bit crazy: barking at the boy, pulling at its leash.

I didn’t even see Jake move. I blinked, and he and the other dog were rolling to a stop in the middle of the street, Jake on top.

People, that was one thing. People were, in Jake’s mind, pretty much my responsibility.

But dogs? Dogs didn’t get to threaten his family. Ever.

Human Years

I’ve never been very good about taking pictures. There are bunch from 2002 (when we got Dizzy), a few from 2003, and then a big gap until 2007, right around his birthday. Kaylee’s two years old. Jake’s seven. No snow on the muzzle, yet, though he tires out on our walks a little sooner than he used to. He keeps hurting his back leg when he tears after rabbits in the back yard and hurls himself off the deck at full tilt.

He’s not sleeping on the bed anymore. Little bit too much work to get up there.

I’ve stopped buying rawhides in bulk – his manic chewing days are past.

He’s still a puppy, though, at heart. In his heart. With his heart.

Kaylee grips him by the (so soft, so thick) ruff around his neck, and pulls herself onto his back where he lays like a sphinx in the middle of the yard.

He sighs, and grins. She hugs his neck.

What can you do?

Winter

2012-02-04 Jake snow

Winter in Denver is cold at night, even when there isn’t much snow. Jake’s never been a huge fan of the snow, but by 2010, he struggles to find a place to sleep in the house at night. He’s moved away from my side of the bed, where he’s slept for years, and tucks in on the far side, away from the patio door and the cold.

He’s taking pain medication and anti-inflammatory pills now, but I don’t always remember to give them to him in the summer — most of the time he gets around fine, he just doesn’t like long walks as much.

2011-11-12 Jake and Sean
2011. Sean learns to say “Jake” before he learns to say “Daddy.” I understand. He’s a dog person.

I don’t know when the every-few-days pain meds and other pills became an every meal, every day, every season, and sometimes-extras-at-noon thing. It seems like a long time ago. By 2012, it seems like it’s always been that way.

But he can get around, still, all by himself. Up and down the stairs to the basement, where our office is. That’s pretty good for an old puppy.

The slick floors start to mess with his ability to get around. We lay out runners along all his frequent paths.

He starts to have trouble with the full flight of stairs. He gets down okay, but I have to carry him up.

Vet visits become… well, we know everyone there on sight. They know Jake at a glance, from the sidewalk outside.

“I’ll be honest,” our amazing vet says. “I’ve suggested about everything there is to suggest.” She looks at me. “If I can be honest, you guys have done everything that can be done, and more — you’ve gone further to make Jake’s life good than any family I’ve worked with.”

I look at Jake. He gives me a big, bathsheet kiss.

“What else can you do?”

It’s October. Cold is coming on again. Sean toddles over to Jake and reaches across his back.

“No, buddy,” I caution. “Don’t get on Jake.” Sean looks back at me. “It hurts him.”

The little man looks down at this great black creature. This pillar. This noble hound. Then he bends down and pats his neck.

“Jake. Good. Puppy.”

Days in the Sun

2013 has been a battle. The good days start to get buried under not-so-great days. He is, above all things, tired. I start to wonder if “The Old Man” will see his birthday. I try to get used to the idea he won’t.

He does. He greets me at the door that day, smiling.

Probably the last day he moved anywhere without one of us watching, ready to jump in and catch him.

 

There’s a point where you make a hard decision. When you realize there will be no sudden systemic failure, no heart disease, no cancer; nothing but an unrelenting, exhausting, life-sapping fade that pushes out every memory either of you ever had of better times.

When you realize he’s ready, and you aren’t.

Yesterday, the whole family spent the evening outside. Jake was happy and smiling the whole time. Relaxed and content in the middle of his yard, accepting the hugs and pets and scratches and love that are his due.

2013-07-24 Jake and Kaylee

I made cheeseburgers. Toasted buns. Ketchup. Nothing fancy. Jake got one just for him, in his bowl, cut up, because I have always spoiled him as much as I thought I could get away with.

The whole thing wore us out a bit, but it was worth it. It was a good day.

Today, we called the vet, who came to the house personally. A little while later, Jake left. Then he left with them.

They live so fast because they love so much, I think. Nothing can sustain that forever.

But god how he tried.

I’m Going to Tell You About a Life

The life, of course, is mine.

Shaped in every facet by this dog. This best of all possible friends.

There’s too much in my life – too much love – for everything to fall apart with Jake gone. I think he made sure of that – that the family (and I) would be taken care of – before he lay down.

But it hurts, this life of mine.

Right now, it hurts.

“Tell me a story about him,” Kaylee says, tucked in at bed time. “Something funny. It will make you feel better.”

So I tell her about the table leg at Halloween. I tell her about the day Jake figured out the deal with “catch” — that I was always going to throw the ball away again, like an idiot — and took the ball, dropped it on the ground, and laid down on top of it as if to say. “We’re done with this nonsense, Dad.”

Kaylee and I laugh a little. We hug.

It’s a start.

2010-04-03 Beautiful Jake

Things I Learned from Jake: Always Go for the Walk

5/9/2010

There’s not enough time. It’s drizzling. It’s too hot. It’s too cold.

Forget all that. Go for the Walk.

You will never find you’ve spent too much time with your friend, outside.

You will always regret the walks you didn’t take – the opportunities squandered for less important things.

I learned to discuss the possibility of taking a walk very obscurely, around my pets. Jake figured out the word, so I started spelling it.

Then he figured out what I was spelling.

Then he figured out all the synonyms.

I should have just said the word, then immediately caved in when he ran over, tapped his leash, and looked back at me.

The worst possible outcome would have been a walk, outside, with my buddy.

My Noble Hound, My Unwavering Pal




Daddy and his puppy

Originally uploaded by ktbuffy

Jake turned 13 today. Pretty damned good for any canine – pretty amazing for a ninety-pound pile of bone and muscle like him.

Best dog I’ve ever had; probably the best I ever will have. So easy to train. So good with kids. So bloody goddamned smart.

His joints are more arthritis than bone, now, it seems like. Some kind of nerve deterioration in his back legs. Glaucoma-blind in one eye. He takes more pills with one meal than I take in a month. Stairs are a deadly nemesis; hardwood floors their petty, vicious ally.

And, still, he comes to greet me when I get home. Still he smiles.

Still, he sneaks rawhide treats away from our young puppy as though it were the easiest thing in the world.

I can’t easily remember my life without him. I spend a lot of time imagining him gone.

Happy Birthday, Old Man. I love you.

Genes

Some folks have a project they’re working on, and for this project, they want everyone involved to produce some old photo from when we were kids.

“Doyce can just bring in one of Sean, though,” they say. “It’s basically the same thing.”

Obviously, they’re delusional.

I’m sure I have no idea what they’re talking about.

Nope. No idea at all.

Crazypants. That’s what they are. Crazy. Pants.

Workspace

I posted a picture of a new chair to Twitter yesterday.  Alongside the picture, I said:

Replaced ten year old home office chair with Something Fancy. Butt approves. Daytime standing desk doesn’t care.

(I know, riveting social media, right?)

In addition to the new (incredibly comfy, dangerously reclinable) chair, I removed the small “ladder” desk that Kate uses when she brings her laptop in for nerdly together time (not to worry: I replaced it with something considerably more sturdy), and generally did a lot of housecleaning in the workspace, especially in the closet (which got a new shelf unit that ended up mostly empty, thanks to my “throw it out!” style of clean-up).

As a general rule, I adhere as closely as I can to the “It’s all Too Much” school of thought when it comes to my living spaces. When I’m cleaning up I focus what, exactly, I want a space to be for, and basically just remove everything that doesn’t directly support that purpose. That might sound pretty zen, but I assure you it’s anything but new age feng shui.

For example, I want to use my office to:

  • Do non-writing computer-related stuff (typically at my desk).
  • Write (often not at my desk).
  • Edit/revise (back at my desk again).
  • Do computery stuff with my wife and/or daughter.
  • Read.

In addition, there are a few other things my office needs to be able to do, primarily:

  • Host some stuff that Sean can play with
  • Remain resistant to permanent Sean-related damage to the stuff Sean can’t play with

To this end, my home office has:

  • A new, still-kind-of-fume-laden, super-comfy chair.
  • My monstrous, utterly impractical desk.
  • My ‘side desk’ for laptops and hardcopies of stuff.
  • Kate’s desk.
  • My desktop (let’s be honest: gaming) computer.
  • My dayjob laptop.
  • My contractor job laptop.
  • My daughter’s laptop.
  • My netbook (on which I do all my first draft writing, pretty much).
  • A comfy wingback (where said writing takes place).
  • A big closet with spare computer bits, software, and gaming stuff for both myself and smaller persons.
  • A small bookshelf with books I really can’t bear to be a whole floor away from, or which I want to read ‘next’.
  • A baby-gate ‘cage’ around said bookshelf.

Clearly, the space serves many masters, and in order to fight what might seem inevitable clutter-creep, I have to be really vicious about my “if it doesn’t apply to the purpose of the space, it goes” rule. It doesn’t make the room spartan, by any means, but if you understand everything room has to do, you might concede that at the very least it’s efficient.

I don’t have a picture of the whole room, but this is current picture of the desk area:

Not pictured: my droid, propped up against the right monitor, so I can use it to check a bunch of phone-related things, and the podcasting microphone, because I'm (sadly) not podcasting anything right now.

The only object I don’t really need on the desk? That would be the stone ‘lawn ornament’ frog that you can see center left, holding my soda glass, and given what I went through to acquire the damned thing, I’m certainly not getting rid of it.

I didn’t set this picture up: that’s just how I left it this morning when I walked out the door.

And where did I walk out the door to?

That would be my dayjob work space which, in contrast, serves only one purpose.

Over a year at my "standing desk" (assembled from two "shoe caddies" from the closet department at Lowes.

Aside from its purpose (note the sweet, sweet singular), the only other goal I have with this space is to change things up as much as I can from my home space, in terms of physical requirements: I stand rather than sit and use a different style of keyboard and mouse — all told, I probably spend well over 16 hours on a computer every day of the working week, and doing whatever I can to reduce movement repetition is critical to my continued (relative) health and avoidance of RSI.

What about you guys? I have an unhealthy fascination for seeing pictures of where people do their work and play: got any cool setups link to? Share!

Merciless

This is one of the first and finest pictures I have of me and my daughter. Forgive me the luxury of its size.

It was taken in mid-January of 2006. Kaylee is about three days shy of five months old — about a month older than Sean is right now.

I can’t tell you a lot about the picture. I know some friends were in town to visit and were in the background, chatting away. I know Kate (whom I had just met) took the picture. I have no idea why I was giving my little girl a bath at 10 pm, although I suppose I can make an educated guess.

What I can tell you is that, when I think of pictures of me Kaylee, it is that picture and this one, taken a few months later, that I think of.

It might be safe to say that when I think of Kaylee, these things are what I think of.

Here’s the most recent picture I have of my baby girl.

Kaylee graduates from kindergarten today. My spies tell me that her class will be performing a song called “First Grade”, sung to the tune of “New York, New York.”

I’m leaving, today…

I’ve learned some lessons in the last five and a half years, most of which have been delivered painfully and at regrettable (if ultimately fair) personal cost, and this picture reminds me of the most important.

Be there.

It will never matter, ultimately, how many promotions you got, or how many pages your wrote, or (certainly) how many levels you gained — the final accounting of your life only tallies one thing: the memories of you held by your loved ones.

I am (quite literally) here to tell you that the time you have in which to create those memories is so infinitesimally, astonishingly, vanishingly small, every chance flickering away like a bad film projection in the space between breaths.

Forgive me for the cliche, my loved ones, but they grow up so fast.

I’m so very proud of my little girl for how far she’s come, and I can’t wait to see where she’s going to go.

But goddammit, I wish she’d hold still for a little while.

Just a little.

Because frankly, this isn’t fair.