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'Tis but a scratch

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It’s back.

I took Ruby to the vet for surgery in 2016 for what we thought was a torn ligament. They did an x-ray before surgery and found it was a large tumor instead.  Since she was already prepped for surgery, and the chest x-ray was clear, we went ahead with the amputation immediately.  The post-amputation biopsy came back positive for osteosarcoma. Ugh. All my research said I’d be lucky to have another year with her.

August 2017, we celebrated her first ampuversary. She was still doing well, but I was just waiting for the other shoe to drop. All her checkups were good, and she was just my happy, hoppy, wiggly girl still. So we kept going.

1st Ampuversary – August 24, 2017

Suddenly, it was August 2018 and we were celebrating her second ampuversary! This was about the time I started to think we were in the clear. She surpassed her life expectancy by an extra year! Maybe we’d caught it in time, and the amputation was enough to keep it from spreading.

2nd Ampuversary – August 24, 2018

Then, late in September she stopped eating her kibble. I thought maybe she was just over it. So I switched to something different, softer.  That worked for a few days. Then she stopped eating that. I started to notice she was losing weight. She was still interested in “people” food so she was getting snacks when I would share. But one day, I gave her a piece of my string cheese, which is her absolute favorite. I’ve never eaten a whole string cheese while she’s in the house. But she wouldn’t take it. I set it down in front of her and she turned away. I called and made a vet appointment right away.

The vet checked her out and everything looked OK, other than the weight loss, but she wanted to do an x-ray “just to check.” My vet, admittedly, doesn’t have a poker face. When she walked into the room I knew it wasn’t good.  She’s got 3 spots on her lungs, one large one on her spleen, and her liver and spleen are enlarged.

So, there isn’t much to be done now. I had decided against chemo after the amputation, and I’m sticking with that.  I just know it’s not right for us, and the vet concurred that there wouldn’t be much benefit from chemo at this point. She gave us some medicine to help with nausea in case that’s why she wasn’t eating.

I know I’m incredibly lucky to have been blessed with two more years with Ruby after her osteosarcoma diagnosis, and knew this was coming… but it still sucks so hard.

For now, I’m just keeping her comfortable. Feeding her whatever snacks she wants (lots and lots of chicken!) She’s getting lots of snuggles and spending time with her favorite people. I’m just waiting for her to tell me when she’s ready to go… and hoping I’m able (and willing) to recognize the signs.

Yes, I did dress up like Ruby (for a scavenger hunt). We like to stare off into the middle distance and contemplate the meaning of life.

Ruby Tuesday II – That’s What Friends Are For

We’re almost at 3 weeks post-amputation (tomorrow the 14th). I read a lot of posts where people said it took a few weeks to feel like you did this *for* your pet and not *to* them. I totally get that now. It’s only been in the last couple of days where Ruby seems more like Ruby, and it makes me feel better about my decision.

I’ve got a co-worker who is a huge animal lover.  She’s got two gorgeous German Shepherds, one of which, Thor, is blind. Marsha’s been so supportive and encouraging.  She sent me a link to a harness/sling she’d used when one of her doggies had an ACL injury to help with stairs. She kept asking how it was going and I had to admit that I was just carrying Ruby up and down the stairs. I think I was too scared to even try it. Marsha encouraged me again to use the sling and just show Ruby I was there for her.

Low and behold… we conquered those stairs on the first try! It was slow going, but I was surprised how little support she needed from me to go up. I was even more surprised when she darted down the stairs the next morning on her own before I could get the sling on her. So after weeks of me carrying her up and down (even before the surgery), I found she could handle down just fine, and only needed a little support going up! These tripawds are amazing!

Last night, I had a friend drop off a care package of treats for Ruby and a few for me, too… Chateau La Paws Pinot Noir. It even supports animal shelters! Can’t wait to try that out, too bad I can’t share with Ruby. Funny story, I realized I’d setup our swag in the exact right spot for a picture when I saw my “cone of shame” doggy picture behind it.  It’s a poster from the movie Amelie and it’s been hanging in my house longer than I’ve even had Ruby, but it’s very appropriate now.

Ruby and I have the best friends!

Thank you Julie and McKenna!!! Isn’t that bag adorable?

Since tonight is Ruby Tuesday, I finally got around to making the Pupcake recipe I found on this site. I didn’t notice until I was done that yogurt was included in the ingredients, but wasn’t included in the instructions. So, needless to say, I didn’t include it. Whoops! Ruby didn’t seem to mind. 🙂  But if anyone knows what step I should have added the yogurt in, feel free to set me straight! They were super easy so we might be making them again in the future.

ruby-pupcakes2

Pupcakes! Ruby inhaled the ‘icing’ first. She takes after her person. 😉

The recipe made 12 Pupcakes. One for Ruby, of course. And 11 for the neighborhood doggies. I packaged them up and am planning on handing them out tomorrow. There are tons of dogs in the neighborhood, so it seems only right to share the love.

Note to include with the Pupcakes (along with the recipe).

Note to include with the Pupcakes (along with the recipe).

I found the recipe here:  https://tripawds.com/forums/eating-healthy/pup-cakes-a-treat-shared-by-bellevue-animal-hospital-our-vet/

Grain-Free PupCakes

You’ll need:
1 cup of peanut butter
3 eggs
2 mashed bananas
1/2 cup coconut flour
1/4 cup plain yogurt
3/4 tsp baking soda
1 tsp honey

Peanut Butter Icing
6 oz of light cream cheese
4 oz of creamy all natural peanut butter

To make this recipe:
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Line muffin pan with paper muffin cups. Mix peanut butter, eggs, bananas and honey. Add coconut flour and baking soda. Mix well. Fill muffin cups 3/4 of the way. Bake for 20-25 minutes. To make the icing, blend the cream cheese and peanut butter until creamy. Refrigerate the icing for 20 minutes. Let pupcakes cool, then ice.

Makes approximately 12 pupcakes. 200 calories each. (Pay attention to calorie count if your dog is on a diet, and keep in mind that treats should never make up more than 10% of your pet’s daily caloric intake!)

 

Ruby Tuesday

Harry lovin' on Ruby.

Harry lovin’ on Ruby.

I’m starting to think Harry the cat knows something is up.  He’s been loving on Ruby a lot this past week.  Normally, he’s pretty wary of her so this is something new.  Ruby typically goes to sleep in her bed right next to my bed, but sneaks up sometime in the middle of the night. It’s a high bed, but luckily there is a small couch at the end of it that makes a perfect step up. I used to get annoyed, but now I’m just happy to have her near me. Recently, she’s needs a hand to get up, and somehow I always seem to wake up in time to give her a boost.

Harry does what he wants (he’s a cat, remember) so he climbs into and out of bed whenever he feels like it.  Before Ruby’s amputation, I’d wake up most mornings with Harry on one side of me and Ruby on the other. They’d sleep in the same bed, but never touch. The other morning I woke up to Harry giving Ruby some hugs (cat headbutts). Ruby mostly seemed confused, but didn’t object to it.  Then Harry basically sat on her head:

"Umm... there appears to be a cat on my head. Care to do anything about this?"

“Umm… there appears to be a cat on my head. Care to do anything about this?”

I’m loving this new found friendship between them, but it makes me wonder if Harry “knows.” I do think animals can sense things we can’t so perhaps Harry feels that Ruby is sick and wants to show her extra kindness. Although, I’m not sure where the above picture falls on the “kindness scale.”

Ruby got some extra human lovin’ this weekend, too.  We went over to my parents’ house on Saturday and Sunday. That’s her happy place. Ruby doesn’t much care for most people. Men especially frighten her, but she *loves* my mom, dad, nephews and niece, and tolerates my brother. When we’re getting ready to go over there I ask “Do you want to go see your people?” She always responds with lots of wiggles, because they are.  I’m her “person,” but they’re her “people.”

Lots of extra scritches from Grammy!

Lots of extra scritches from Grammy!

She got lots of lovin’ from everyone. Dinner Sunday may or may not have been steak (talk about spoiled!)

I have to say my favorite part of the long weekend was little Milo.  He’s the youngest son of my brother’s girlfriend. He’d never seen a tripawd before, so of course the first thing out of his mouth was “Will it grow back?”  Followed quickly by, “will you get her a robot leg?”

Later, he suggested the vet should have moved her remaining back leg to the middle to make it easier for her to get around.  I told him I’d mention it when we go back.

I’ve been having a hard time since the surgery. Not sure if I did right by Ruby, but being able to joke about her missing leg with a 7-year-old really helped.

Ruby’s still sleeping a lot, and I’m hoping it’s just her recovery from surgery and nothing more sinister. Either way, I’m working on a bucket list of experiences for her (and me) to accomplish before it’s time to say goodbye. Since Ruby doesn’t care much for the company of other dogs, most of the items will be treats and trips to see her people.

I did see a post on here where someone made muffins for doggy friends and I’m going to steal that idea. There are a lot of dogs in the neighborhood, and while Ruby doesn’t much care for other dogs, I think it would be a nice random act of kindness to leave some treats for the neighbor doggies in her name, whether Ruby is a fan of them or not. So, I’ve got to first track down that recipe, then get baking! I think I’ll try to deliver them next Ruby Tuesday.

Counting Experiences

Today was our last scheduled post-op visit to the vet.  Ruby got her staples removed. The incision looks really good and has healed nicely. She was a big ‘fraidy cat at the vet’s as usual, so I held her on my lap while they removed the staples. She didn’t want to get up off of my lap when they were done. I told the vet it was just like when I met her at the shelter. That poor sickly, skinny puppy crawled onto my lap and fell asleep. The staff had to pick her up and carry her off so I could sign the paperwork to bring her home.  The vet said the dogs often pick their owners, and Ruby picked me.

Ruby in her new bed. I think Harry the cat is a bit jealous.

Ruby in her brand new bed. I think Harry the cat is a bit jealous.

My emotions got the better of me last night. Ruby and I were cuddling on the couch watching TV. I was giving her scritches (she loves getting her armpits scratched) when I noticed her panting a bit. She’s never been much of a panter. Only when she is very overheated, or scared/upset. So naturally I completely overreacted and started sobbing.

Did I do the right thing for her with the amputation? Has the cancer already spread and she’s in pain? Am I being selfish trying to get more time with her? Am I being selfish by not doing chemo/radiation? Should I try to buy her more time? What’s the right answer?

Ruby's new shirt. Inspired by the Black Knight from Monty Python.

Ruby’s new shirt. Inspired by the Black Knight from Monty Python.

I just want to do right by Ruby. At first, I tried to inject some humor into the situation (see shirt above).  I call her “Hoppy” and “Stumps.” But, now she’s been sleeping so much this last week I worry she’s in pain, or the cancer’s already back. She coughed a bit when we were sitting on the deck this afternoon, so my brain jumped straight to “the cancer is in her lungs.” When maybe she just had something stuck in her throat because she thinks she’s a goat and always tries to eat the tall grass.

I wish I knew how to be rational in this situation, but it’s harder than I’d imagined. We can never really know how much time any of us have. But I’m still not ready to say goodbye, and I worry I’ll be forced to before I’m ready. Would I ever be ready? I suppose not.

So, Ruby and I aren’t going to count days. We’re going to count experiences. Today that included a Puppuccino from the Starbuck’s drive-thru and hanging out on the deck/back yard all afternoon enjoying the nice weather. Tomorrow, we’re going to see her favorite people (Grammy, PopPop, and the kids.) After that? Who knows. But I’ve got some good stuff planned for my Rougarou.

Starbucks Puppuccino Face.

Starbucks Puppuccino Face.

It’s Offical

This is how she would lay down in the weeks leading up to surgery. Her leg was so painful she'd hold it up in the air so there wasn't any pressure on it.

This is how she would lay down in the weeks leading up to surgery. Her leg was so painful she’d hold it up in the air so there wasn’t any pressure on it.

Today marks one week post-surgery. Quick recap. We only found Ruby’s tumor when her x-rays were done pre-op for what was supposed to be an ACL repair.  I had the option to do a biopsy, wait on the results, then still potentially amputate based on what they found. Or we could go directly to amputation.  The latter was my choice based on how much pain I knew her to be in, and what I saw on that x-ray. Since we didn’t biopsy before the surgery, they did the biopsy after her leg was already removed. I’ve been waiting for the results to come back from pathology for a week now.

Well, the vet just called. It’s just what I feared… osteosarcoma.

A quick Google search of osteosarcoma in dogs and you’ll see that it’s not a matter of if it will come back, but when. Ruby’s likely only got a few months left. Maybe we’ll get lucky and make it to a year, but the odds aren’t good. My poor dog that only started with a tiny limp a little over a month ago probably won’t make it to her 5th birthday.

Ruby collage

I know I made the right decision now for amputation. We removed the source of pain, and she can get back to being my little Wiggle Butt. Chemo and radiation are an option, but given how quickly her leg tumor progressed and how aggressive the cancer is… it wouldn’t be curative and would likely only buy a little bit of time. I’m not sure if it would be fair to her.

So, my little Rougarou and I are going to live life to the fullest. That means lots of riding in the car (“I love riding in cars!”) to get McDonald’s ice cream cones and Starbucks puppuccinos.  And lots and lots of extra time over at her favorite place, my parents’ house. Where she can get “scritches” from PopPop and help him clean up when he “accidentally” drops food, bark at my brother, and get cuddles from the kids.

My sweet girl.

My sweet girl.

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