I think I am slightly preoccupied with death.
I don't like that feeling, worse even saying it, and I'm hoping it is a temporary thing; but there, I've said it.
Perhaps the cause of this preoccupation is seeing my 83 year old mother now in an assisted living facility. Or perhaps it is the news, the constant barrage of stories of death and near death. Or perhaps it is me drawing ever closer to that big 50--five zero--that makes me estimate the years of my dogs' lives in comparison to my own life. I grew up with the understanding that every year a dog lived equated to seven human years. According to onlineconversion.com the calculations differ from the long held seven to one theory, specifically "the formula is: 10.5 dog years per human year for the first 2 years, then 4 dog years per human year for each year after."
If I have this right then Pepper is about 71, Scruffy between 37 and 42, Marisol a sprightly 26, and Texas Pete may be about 29. I've never been good with math (just ask the IRS or my students when I try to divide them into groups) but these numbers present a fascinating range, one that has me trying to figure out everyone's "real age" and wondering where we all fit into this strange pack-turned-family. And how long we can all stay together.
Recently, lots of attention has been focused on finding our "real age" based on environmental, health, and mental faculty factors. 50 is touted as the new 40. 75 the new 60. Apply this theory to dogs. Specifically, Texas Pete. When Katie first rescued Pete and imagined that he'd be living in her household we took him to the vet who estimated that he was between two and three actual years old. Let's just say he was two then and three-and-a-half now. Apply the "real age" theory knowing only that we found him extremely malnourished (ribs and hipbones protruding) apparently living off whatever he could find for an unknown period of time. The brown ring where a collar had rotted away remained obnoxiously obvious for the first four months he was with us (seriously, who wants to wash a savage dog with extremely sharp teeth?) further indicating neglect. A Collier County Animal Control representative who visited our home (yes, Pete has a rap sheet but that's a story for another day) said of Pete, "these poor little guys often get used as footballs. Somebody probably kicked him a lot."
Okay, that's enough to know that environmental factors aged him. Starvation, poor hygiene, and physical abuse. I'm going to guess this aged him a good 15 human years, and as these likely occurred during his formative 10.5 to one ratio years, that would put him at about 45 now in dog years.
But, we must also factor in speed. When Katie first tried to catch Pete (after nearly hitting him with her car as he ran loose in her neighborhood) she called me and said she had found "the fastest chihuahua in the world." And he is fast. He used to run away from our house any time the porch door was open, slipping past us like a greased prayer. He shot out into the neighborhood so quickly we had to look twice to make sure it was actually his tiny body already half a block away before the screen door slammed shut, announcing his departure.
Speed. Pete's built for it and surely running kept him in better cardiovascular shape. He's like Jason Bourne, able to crash through buildings sideways and hit the ground running and ready to dropkick the nearest would-be assassin. So add back in (rather, take away) five years for speed and general buffness and he's closer to 40. Take into account that he came to us surprisingly tick-, flea-, and heartworm-free, and we can grace him with another two years. A young man still at 38. A fact made obvious since he has managed to tear actual wood off of our spa and the porch floor in an attempt to reach the three feral, black and white cats living under the porch. Pete has spent countless hours on that porch, lived there exclusively the first six months he was with us, and he'll be hanged if cats are going to occupy space right under his domain. This is what happens when you relocate into a warm house and become part of the inside pack...cats move into the neighborhood.
But then there's the way he sleeps. Oddly enough it is the sleep of the dead. Jason Bourne might sleep with one eye open, but try and wake Pete from his burrow under a bedblanket with gentle calls of endearment and voila, a 99 year old man, so positively still and quiet I feel the need to pass a mirror under his muzzle to see if it fogs. What does it mean? Did the time spent in the wild foraging for garbage fragments, running the speed of sound, age him that much? Or is he simply deaf like most 99 year olds I know? Of course, that's if you try to wake him. Perhaps he's just playing possum, because should you be unaware that Pete lurks asleep below a blanket and say you are another dog, one of the Marshmallows perhaps, just looking for a nice place to take a snooze atop a bed or sofa and you step on Pete, however unintentionally, he will rise up, a blanket-swathed living Venus fly-trap, and commence to snapping like a steel trap.
This is where the tough math and not-so-tough love comes in. Instead of the 61 years of difference between a 99 and a 38 year old, I'm going to err on the spirit of vigor, the same eternal spirit that makes most of us look in the mirror feeling like we're still a ten year old mentally and wonder "who the heck is that old person?" I can't say if he's always a sound sleeper, but I believe that his environmentally induced sleep pattern adds about ten more years onto his human-based age.
So Texas Pete is 48. In dog years converted to real age human years. Basically, he's my age.
48 in human years is still pretty young. It's the new 30-something. Still young enough to make a difference in someone's life, read thousands of good books, maybe write a couple of good books. Learn to skateboard or ski. See the world.
For a dog, 48 is pretty prime. It's the new 30-something. Still young enough to make a difference in someone's life, sleep thousands of hours, chase hundreds of cats. Learn to sit or stay. See the world.
But sometimes the world Pete and I see is scary. Just this morning we were looking out the kitchen window and I saw out back in the grassy alley that divides our yard and that of a neighbor's a small still body, white and black, evidently one of the feral cats John has had me feeding for a few weeks. One of the small ones from under the porch.
I set Pete down. I washed some dishes and waited to see if the cat would move. It didn't.
I tried to calculate cat years to my own. Were they the same as dog years? I didn't know. It was so small, it had to be one of the kittens. Maybe six months? I went outside to take care of what had to be done. And when I got to the small black and white body lit by sunlight, I was stunned to find it was simply shadows on a white stone. Mango leaves shadowed from the morning sunlight onto a stone roughly the size of kitten.
I estimate the stone is much older than me, possibly thousands of years older than me. I googled for a conversion of a stone's life to a human's. No hits.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
That's beautiful and actually something I've been thinking about recently although not in quite as much detail as you have! My young one (he'll be six this year) is fast turning into a cranky (and achy) old man!
ReplyDeleteOh my gosh, you still have that sure touch, to pull feelings about life and death and joy from a description of dogs. Thank you for posting this.
ReplyDeleteAnd what a grabbing title!