[nagdu] Rest in peace, Echo, April 17, 1995 - May 4, 2012
Sherrill O'Brien
sherrill.obrien at verizon.net
Sat May 5 17:36:07 UTC 2012
Oh Tracy, your beautiful words of tribute for your wonderful Echo brought
tears to my eyes. I have had to endure that awful last decision and the pain
and emptiness it leaves, even though it's the best thing to do. She gave joy
to all those living in your home for so many years--there's no better gift
than that!
And you'll always have the memory of being able to celebrate that birthday
number 17! The good and loving care that you took of her, and her of you,
helped her live so happily for those many years, I'm sure.
Sherrill
it
-----Original Message-----
From: nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org]On
Behalf Of Tracy Carcione
Sent: Saturday, May 05, 2012 11:06 AM
To: nagdu at nfbnet.org
Subject: [nagdu] Rest in peace, Echo, April 17, 1995 - May 4, 2012
Rest in peace, Echo, April 17, 1995 - May 4, 2012
We had to put Echo to sleep yesterday. Her arthritis had gotten very bad,
and she seemed to
be uncomfortable more and more, so we called the vet to come. We found a
vet who makes
house calls, and they've been taking care of Echo for the last year or so.
It was good that
Echo could lie in one of her favorite places, at home, and die in peace.
We are very sad. I thought I was ready, but I wasn't. I keep listening
for her, and
walking around the places she used to lie.
My husband did a lot to take care of her, and it leaves a big empty space
in his life, too.
He was wonderful with her, very patient with all the old dog problems and
quirks.
While I was looking through my file to write down her death date, I found
an entry I'd made
after the first NFB convention I attended with Echo, in New Orleans. It
was just a few
months after we'd met, and I wasn't sure she'd be able to cope with it,
but she did great!
Echo's specialty was remembering places we'd been before. She was great
at finding the
right elevator bank. Once, I'd had breakfast at a table off a big
corridor. Later that
day, I got turned around somehow after a meeting and was looking for the
elevator, but not
giving Echo good directions, so she started showing me places we'd been,
trying to hit on
the right one. She showed me the table where I'd had breakfast, and I
recognized where we
were and gave her the right directions at last.
She was a soft dog who needed a bit of cheerleading, but, so long as she
knew I had
confidence in her and appreciated her, she could do anything.
I remember, at that same convention in New Orleans, we took a carriage
ride. We thought my
husband would have to lift Echo up into the carriage, but she climbed the
ladder like it was
the most natural thing in the world.
When we first got back from training, we had some problems, but GDB sent
someone out, and,
in about 45 minutes, he figured out the tiny thing I was doing wrong,
straightened me out,
and we were good from then on. We did a lot of travelling together; Echo
had a lot of miles
under her paws. She worked until she was eleven and a half, then she had
a long, happy
retirement.
Like my husband says, we will be lucky if we have as good a life as she
did. And to have
people to love and care for us up to the end. She always did her best for
us, and we did
our best for her. Sadly, the last thing we could do for her was give her a
peaceful ending.
Now she's in the happy hunting ground, chasing rabbits and squirrels like
she used to, and
stealing tomatoes. My parents are there, so they can give her a belly rub.
And she can wag
her tail again. When her back end got bad, she couldn't really wag like
she used to.
Good-bye, old gal. We miss you.
Tracy
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