I awaken in the night and hear it. Silence. I wait for more. It comes. I smile.
I hear the dogs breathing softly in the night. Now, in the longest, darkest time of the year, I awaken in the still, silent night and hear only my dogs’ relaxed breathing. I smile. It’s comforting. Peaceful.
My dogs snore of home.
I can tell them by their breathing. Murphy, my delicate, mild-mannered oh-so-polite aging girl, snores like the proverbial lumber jack. Only, size for size, decibels louder. First time I heard it, she had just come home to live with me, and I leaped out of bed, sure we were being invaded. Over 13 years later, each time a snort startles me, I know the invasion was successful, and smile.
Sometimes, most times, she breathes with soft, gentle sighs. Other times I rest a hand lightly on her back, to make sure she’s still there. She’ll rouse and snuggle up, and we’ll go back to sleep in the cold dark night, back to back, butt to butt.
I used to wonder, way back when, if I could ever love this puppy who was not my beloved, long-lost English Cocker, if we could ever fit. We were strangers, but it didn’t take long for love to settle in my heart. Her snorts, her relaxed sleep, remind me.
Now, as I hear her soft breathing, I know that love, home, settled deep in hers. In theirs. Because all my animals sleep well, comforted in their safety. Knowing we are family. We are together. They do not have to be on guard. They can let down. They can breathe softly in the night.
Love created space to sleep.
Alki, my raucous ten-year-old boy, is rambunctious by day, soft murmuring dreamer by night. His breath whispers of deep dreams, contentment, secure and relaxed and deeply resting in his secured spot in bed. Storing up for daytime mischief.
I smile in the night.
Sure, I poke Murphy sometimes when her snoring shakes me out of mine. She’ll start to grumble but is asleep at the next twitch. Alki’s soft breathy lullaby ripples mildly.
I never hear Grace the Cat breathing. No snuffles from her cat perch above my desk, no soft snores from her Snuggly Safed bed at night. She’s there. Just can’t hear her. She’ll prowl the night, inspect us, snuggle.
Suspended in darkness, I am awake, happy, content. They are here, content with me. Species mingled, personalities meshed, family.
In the heart of a 21st-century city the only sound in the deep night is a 21st-century family, sleeping the human-animal bond.
Soft breathing, counterpoint. Pause. Rhythmic.
Life resting before dawn.
How did it come to this? How did so many years go by before contentment settled so easily on me?
But it did. We’re family. Here. Now. Content. Woman, cat, dogs.
Murphy snuggles closer. Alki is still, soft swoosh rising. Grace the Cat burrows deep.
I hear the dogs softly breathing.
Yes, they snore of home. Of love.
I smile.
All is well.
I am home. We are home.
We are family.
© 2011 Robyn M Fritz
Living with anyone, especially yourself, can be irritating. You have grand illusions about being saintly, or at least perfect, but reality doesn’t seem to work like that.
I was thinking, what should I be grateful for this Thanksgiving? Then I saw this silly article, again, and I knew.
Cooking is a skill I apparently lost with menopause—and only miss when I’m hungry.
Take, for example, pea shoots. I love pea shoots. I have no idea what they are, except pea shoots, but we love them at our house, all of us, even the cat. We’re even doing a video starring pea shoots. Now, the dogs always come running when I come through the door with food, but if I say, “Pea shoots!” then Grace the Cat leaps up from her normal out cold snooze and races to hold down the kitchen counter while supervising grocery unloading.
So now I’m a reformed shopper at the West Seattle Farmers’ Market. The vendors tend to explain things to me as they’re putting them in my bag: this is pea shoots, this is spinach, whatever. People in line shake their heads and sigh. But at least I get home safely. With food we kind of know how to eat.
Here I’d been thinking I was just a bit off. And, as usual, not regretting it a bit.
And the condo? I love our condo. My multi-species family loves it. I planned for it to be a place where kids and dogs could come and go while enjoying the beach in our salty, sandy Seattle beach neighborhood. It worked really well for that. What I didn’t count on was the most obvious of all—my animals would age.
I was out with the dogs, scooping poop as we meandered down the street.
I live on the Planet of Awesome and Forever.
On the weekend before the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show back in February I attended a
I also got lucky and won a raffle prize from Hartz at the writing conference. A few weeks later this enormous gift basket arrived in the mail, full of Hartz treats, combs, brushes, a toothbrush, toys galore, and a wonderful note from Jennifer Dombkowski, Integrated Marketing Manager at
It was far more than my multi-species family could use, although these pictures prove that they were fascinated! And, yes, played with a toy or two.
Thanks to Hartz’s generosity at a pet writing conference in New York, a group of homeless dogs and cats in rural western Washington had some fine treats and toys. Jefferson County’s animals have taken a hit with the tough economy, and this briefly helped.
We were afraid for awhile, but ultimately we chose love in our multi-species family. Alki chose love.
