GOODBYE TO LILO

Last week we said goodbye to Lilo, our sweet shar pei:

beautifulgirl

Lilo was just shy of 11 years old, and lived longer than any of our three other shar peis, which was incredible given all of her health problems.  You may have heard that shar peis are prone to a host of health issues, and Lilo had, I believe, all of them, including chronic ear infections, swollen hock syndrome, and entropion.

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Lilo joined our family when she was 10 months old.  We had owned two shar peis — Dexter and Har Gow — who were best friends.  When Har Gow died unexpectedly, we needed a new companion for Dexter on an urgent basis.  We contacted Har Gow’s breeder, and the only dog she had available was Lilo.  She told us that Lilo had been with two other families, but it didn’t work out (including a vague story about an elderly owner that couldn’t care for her).  The breeder assured us that Lilo was a great dog without any problems.  She sent us these photos:

In hindsight, nothing the breeder told us really added up.  As soon as Lilo arrived, we knew she was not as the breeder represented.  She was, for lack of a better word, dull. We subsequently learned that her mother had died during childbirth, which the breeder neglected to mention, which explained a lot.  She had a cherry eye, which the breeder also neglected to mention.  She also forgot to mention that she had tacked Lilo’s eyelids twice, but that it had failed to correct the drooping eyelids (we never really did see Lilo’s eyes).  Lilo was timid, and cowered every time my husband came near her for at least six or seven years, which led us to believe that she had been abused at some point, although the breeder denied it.  She wasn’t cuddly or playful, and fought with Dexter.  After a few months we contacted the breeder about sending her back.  But then, as if Lilo understood our conversations, she suddenly quit fighting with Dexter and settled in, as though she realized staying with us was maybe not so terrible.

best friends

Dexter and Lilo

So if Lilo wasn’t smart or cuddly or playful, what was she?

She was ours.

We all grew on each other, and Lilo became an integral part of our family.  She was a fierce watchdog, with a menacing bark.  She stayed close to us, and was always right there begging for table scraps.  She slept in our room and snored loudly — we used to joke that it was our white noise, kind of like falling asleep to the sound of the ocean.  If you put your face up to her muzzle, she would reward you with wet sloppy kisses.  She loved to lay in the driveway and soak up the sunshine.  She hated thunderstorms and loved marrow bones.  No matter where she was in the house, and no matter how swollen and painful her hocks were, if she heard the treat drawer open, she came running.  She was our Lilo.

chair

My Facebook followers knew Lilo as “stalker dog,” and I loved to photograph her poking around corners:

Dexter died in 2010, and we now have two duck tolling retrievers — Jasper and Maisy — wiith whom Lilo got along just fine.

We noticed a few weeks ago that Lilo had suddenly lost a lot of weight and was becoming disoriented, and we knew that our time with her was drawing to a close.  We agreed that as long as she didn’t appear to be in pain, we wouldn’t put her down.  And so we provided Lilo with the best hospice care we were capable of, and hoped that she wouldn’t suffer.  I don’t know if that was the right decision, but it was our decision.  It was hard watching her go.  It was like watching a shopkeeper close up for the night — first he hangs the closed sign, then he locks the door, sweeps up, empties the cash register, and finally, he closes the lights.  A few days before she died, Lilo hung up the closed sign and stopped eating and drinking.  Then she became bedridden.  She was not really alert in the day or two prior to her death.  And then, finally, she closed the lights.  My employers, who are decent people, were understanding, and I was able to be with Lilo in those final few days, staying by her, comforting her.

comfort

Jasper kept the vigil too, watching over her.

vigil

In a final act of love and compassion, after Lilo passed away my husband cleaned her up before we took her body to the vet for cremation, bathing and blow-drying her.  He swaddled her in a fluffy clean blanket, and cradled her as we sat in the vet’s lobby waiting for assistance.

She was ours.

Rest in peace, sweet Lilo.  We love you.

sunbathing

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FAVORITE GINGER COOKIES

This is a vintage handkerchief that I purchased on ebay.  My daughter loves these old hankies, especially the ones with fancy borders, like the scalloped poinsettia border on this one, and I snap them up at estate sales whenever I see them.  It’s so much nicer to dab away tears with one of these frilly hankies, instead of having to carry around a ball of wadded up soggy tissue.

Also known as the Christmas Flower,  poinsettias are native to Mexico.  They are named after Joel Roberts Poinsett, the first U.S. Ambassador to Mexico and an amateur botanist, who imported them from Mexico in the early 1800s.  According to Mexican legend, a poor child wanted to bring a gift to the Virgin Mary/Holy Child/church altar, but had no money to buy one.  He picked some weeds along the roadside on the way to church to leave as a gift.  By way of a Christmas miracle, the weeds turned into gorgeous bright red star-shaped flowers.

Christmas Poinsettias

At the grocery store yesterday I saw poinsettias that had been dyed blue.  Maybe some grower somewhere is hoping they’ll become known as Hanukkah Poinsettias, but I doubt that will ever happen–the plants were hideously ugly.

Hanukkah poinsettias?

Poinsettias have a special meaning for me.  Two days before Thanksgiving 2010, my dog died.  Dexter, a wiry little shar pei who loved me madly, was “my boy.”  We had learned a few weeks earlier that he had a large abdominal tumor, and there really wasn’t much we could do to stop the progression of the disease.  Our family agreed that as long as he did not appear to be in pain we would keep him at home.  And so we provided Dexter the best hospice care we could, and he passed quietly, surrounded by his heartbroken family that adored him.

Dexter in a pensive mood.

If you have ever experienced the death of a beloved pet, you’ll understand that Dexter dying just about killed me.  We cancelled our Thanksgiving plans with the family and the four of us stayed home, flattened by grief.  It was the saddest Thanksgiving I ever experienced.  That Sunday at church, we bought a poinsettia in his memory, which would be among scores of poinsettias decorating the sanctuary for Christmas.

It is our family’s tradition to usher at the Christmas Eve service at our church.

That year, the sea of poinsettias in the packed sanctuary was as stunning as ever.  As we stood there lined up with our collection plates, I happened to look down at the program in my hand, and saw an insert listing all the names that poinsettias had been donated in honor or in memory of.

Dexter’s name practically jumped off the page at me:

And with that, I started crying.  Rivers of tears streaming uncontrollably down my cheeks. I couldn’t stop them, either.  The kids were staring at me, half embarassed, half scared — they had no idea what was wrong with me.  I was mortified.  After a while, the usher behind me tapped me on the shoulder, and when I turned my red eyes to him to see what he wanted, he whispered in my ear, “You have toilet paper on your shoe.”  I looked down, but there wasn’t any toilet paper on either of my shoes.  As I realized what he had done, I burst out laughing and thanked him for distracting me.  It was perfect.

Last year, as we sat through a service in December, I noticed all the poinsettias and started tearing up again.  My son poked me and made an inquisitive face, and I mouthed, “Dexter.”  He, in turn, poked my daughter, and whispered, “Mom’s crying over Dexter,” who in turn poked my husband and whispered, “Mom’s crying over Dexter.”  Discreet, they are not.  I am hoping that this week when we go to church and see the sanctuary filled with poinsettias, that I can keep my composure.  Fat chance.  But I’ll be prepared with my poinsettia hankie.

I baked a lot the Christmas after Dexter died, trying to spread Christmas cheer to everyone including myself.  I made hundreds of my favorite ginger cookies and shared them with friends and neighbors.  Carolers came by just as I was pulling a batch out of the oven, and they loved the surprise treat.  I even brought a batch of dough to my son’s Boy Scout Troop meeting and, using the church’s oven, was able to serve the boys freshly-baked warm ginger cookies with made-from-scratch hot cocoa.

Inspired by the poinsettia hankie, and memories of my beloved Dexter, I baked a batch of my favorite ginger cookies to bring to my son’s school today for the kids to snack on as they wrapped gifts for a family with a child with cancer.  I’m sure I’ll be baking many more batches before the year is over.

FAVORITE GINGER COOKIES
Author: 
Recipe type: Cookies
 
Ingredients
  • ¾ cup butter, softened (no substitutions)
  • 1-1/4 cups sugar, divided use
  • 1 egg
  • ½ cup Steen's Cane Syrup (no substitutions)
  • 2-1/2 cups flour
  • 2 teaspoons baking soda
  • 2 teaspoons ground ginger
  • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • ½ teaspoon salt
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
  2. Place butter and 1 cup sugar in a large mixing bowl, and beat until fluffy using an electric mixer. Add egg and beat well. Add cane syrup and beat until smooth.
  3. In a medium bowl, combine flour, baking soda, ginger, cinnamon, and salt. Add to butter mixture in 2 additions, stirring well after each addition until thoroughly combined.
  4. Place remaining ¼ cup sugar in a small bowl. Roll dough into 1-inch balls, then roll in sugar until coated. Place approximately 2 inches apart on ungreased cookie sheets. Bake approximately 10 minutes until just firm. Remove from oven and let stand on cookie sheets for 5 minutes before removing to a wire rack to cool.

 

Hot from the oven.  Where’s those boy scouts and carolers?

 A heaping plate of holiday cheer

In loving memory of my boy Dexter