Back to Petloss.com

Petloss.com Year 1997 Tributes - Sly

Sly (Sylvester of Manchester), 12/26/983-10/22/97

Black Labrador Retriever

For almost 14 years, God blessed us with the companionship of the sweetest, most-gentle, and loving dog I've ever known.
On Wednesday, October 22, 1997, I had him "put to sleep," a term that will haunt me for the rest of my life. We are so inadequate that we can't reliably diagnose what might be wrong with our pets and to do something for them. Because of a massive growth in his chest and abdomen pressing on his liver, he stopped eating. He came down from a healthy 90 pounds to a mere 55 very skinny pounds.
On that dreadful morning, I brought him with me to the office. He stayed close to me whenever I moved. I think he knew something was different about this day. He wouldn't take any water; he did take a couple of peanuts from my hand, but only a couple. When it was time to leave the office, I put his leash on and said "come on Sly," and he slowly got to his feet to respond to my command. We met a couple of my co-workers on the way out of the building and the words almost choked me as I tried to control my emotions and tell them what I was about to do.
We arrived at the vet's a little early, so we had to sit in the waiting room for a while talking with the receptionist. Stan (he took care of Sly as a puppy) was almost as emotional as I as he took a close look at Sly. He said my decision was the right one and at the right time. Sly's coloring indicated a liver disfunction that left unattended would cause toxic conditions putting Sly through absolute misery. I lifted him onto the examining table and laid him on his side just before Stan came back into the room.
I was holding his head in my hands and stroking and rubbing him from head to tail and talking to him very softly as he put his head down for the last time. He looked as if he had just gone to sleep. My heart was broken as I started to cry; I've been crying ever since.
I try to think of all the good times: in the park, when he would take off after a deer or some other creature; when we would go to visit grandma and he wanted to be first in the door; and on all the walks we took next to the creek where he used to take an unscheduled bath and try to catch the ducks.
We'll never forget you. And, I hope when I next see you, we can cross the bridge together and spend the rest of eternity where you want to be -- in the park.

George and Bea Stephens
and Angus