Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Waiting For The Call

SUMMARY: While Tika's at the vet, we have to do something to keep our mind off it.

I get scared about my dogs going under anesthesia. Especially when we don't know 100% what the problem is. I've talked myself into being reasonably calm while a teeeeny wee voice in the back of my head is screeching "panic! panic!" It didn't help that Boost was up about every hour from 9:30 until 3:30 with diarrhea. Seems OK this morning; no obvious cause.

Funny, got email this morning from a friend whose agility dog was under anesthesia YESTERDAY to have the same tooth removed for the same reason (but no swelling in their case). The tooth is a "carnasial tooth"--the largest upper premolar closest to the molars. I've heard twice today that that's the most commonly broken tooth in dogs and that it is commonly removed due to such damage.


(Image from this site.)

Still, as I emailed another friend this morning: After Remington, every little thing now makes me think "cancer!" and then I find myself thinking, "why doesn't everyone just get cancer and die and then I don't have to worry about it any more!" and then I could just kick myself and this morning I was hugging Tika and bawling about I didn't mean it don't leave me, that sort of pathetic thing. She thought I was a little over the top and didn't want to have anything to do with it.

I'm fine now.

Really.

Just waiting for the vet to call.

So Boost and I went for a long, not-too-leisurely stroll along the Guadalupe River. She whuffed briefly at another dog, but by George, I was able to stop and actually chat with another dog owner--something that I cannot do with Tika along and it's so discouraging.
My vet's pyracantha shrub. Those little tulip ears--surely it's a border collie?!
Big white bird thing (my mother would be ashamed of me) standing in the Guadalupe. Even swollen with the recent rains, it's not much of a river any more. But it is dammed in a couple of places. The one we walked past shortly thereafter (maybe 20 feet high?) has a salmon ladder.
Workers need to keep the blackberries cut back to allow flow and prevent flooding. It's a nice urban stroll along here.
So pretty, so calming. Such a nice morning (but cold--my earlobes were developing icicles as I jogged). Maybe we'll actually have class tonight.
--Or maybe not. (Back to the real world, waiting for the light rail to cross.)


And of course, where would we be without Mr. Chia Head, who has had a hair-raising experience!

Labels: , , , , , , ,

Complete list of labels

3 Comments:

At 5:07 PM, January 30, 2008 , Blogger Elf said...

Steph says "The big white bird is a Great Egret. The ones with the black bill are Snowy Egrets."

-ellen

 
At 10:04 PM, January 30, 2008 , Blogger Ellen said...

I was first thinking, wait that's a white heron, but I can't keep egrets and herons straight anyway. Turns out no one can either as the names are interchangeable:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Egret

Snowy Egret
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heron

 
At 10:06 PM, January 30, 2008 , Blogger Ellen said...

Glad to hear that Tika's ok.
While I completely understand your stressing about cancer, I think this shows that my powers of denial are stronger than yours as it has not yet occurred to me to stress about cancer with Yoshi and Trek.

 

Post a Comment

Links to this post:

Create a Link

<< Home