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Petloss.com Year 1998 Tributes - Lee Manucia

Lee Manucia Abrahams, 04/03/83-06/02/95

It is with breaking hearts that we announce the death of Lee Dog, Lee Manucia Abrahams, the Love Dog, the Center of the Universe. Lee was euthanized during surgery on June 2, 1995 when it was suddenly revealed that she was suffering from a virulent and advanced cancer of the stomach. She had celebrated her twelfth birthday in April. Lee's discomfort was apparently mild until the day of her death.
Lee lived a full and happy life, enriching and nurturing those who loved her. She was whelped on an Easter Sunday in Phoenix, AZ, the only female in the litter of a registered Golden Retriever named Mischka and her handsome neighbor, a travelling man named Tolman Inman. When only a few weeks old, several of the puppies fell into a swimming pool, but Lee's already burgeoning aquatic skills saved her.
When she left her littermates, Lee lived the first few months of her life with her father Tolman, receiving almost daily visits from Gloria. Lee would ride in the passenger seat of Gloria's Tercel station wagon-an activity and position she enjoyed throughout her life-and would visit Gloria's studio apartment and cockatiel Paolo. By that young age Lee had already developed an unexplained passion for French kissing.
At three months Lee moved with Gloria and Paolo to Durango, CO, where Lee learned to enjoy snow. Her steadfastness and sensitivity toward Gloria were high points in Gloria's turbulent life. Not only did she sense whenever Gloria was upset, but she would run to Gloria's side and provide compassion and encouragement. Once when humiliated by the college's test-grading machines, Gloria went home midday in tears to be greeted with Lee's gentle pink-orchid tongue. Gloria often stated, "Men come and go, but Lee Dog is forever." As Lee's feathering grew in, she came to resemble Tolman but with finer features. She won Best-Looking Pet Award from the local animal shelter. In her puppy socialization class, where she was jokingly referred to as the "Artificial Flatcoat", Lee tied with a Sheltie for first place on the final obedience exam. She enjoyed camping alone with Gloria at Little Molas Lake, a place so beautiful that one always expected to see "Taste the high country" printed in large letters in the sky.
Lee was gentle and tolerant toward Lily, a deaf white kitten whom Gloria adopted for several months until Gloria's allergies forced her removal. Lee was also a gracious older sister to Brandy, a flatulent abused Doberman Gloria adopted from the local animal shelter, whose untimely demise occurred only months later. With the possible exception of cockatiel Paolo, Lee's best friend was a massive black and tan hound named Bonecrusher.
When Gloria moved to Columbia, SC for clinical retraining, Lee had the run of a large, azalea-filled yard bordered by a creek. She proudly discovered a dead possum and an angry turtle. A frightening collision with a hit & run diver left no discernible sequelae except to remind Gloria of the priority of Lee in her life. Lee and Gloria weathered a blizzard driving to NC to meet Gloria's biological half-sister and Norwegian Elkhound nephew Hans. Lee's best friend in SC was a sophisticated and well-traveled terrier named Damon. Trips to Charleston included beach visits for the entire family. Lee also enjoyed chasing crabs on the beaches of Lee Island, NC.
When Gloria moved west for her internship, Lee had to adapt to life in a one-bedroom apartment and to elimination on leash on the sidewalks of Brentwood. She developed a taste for sushi. Attempted evening runs were repeatedly interrupted by the West L.A. Veterans Administration police, but the discovery of an off-leash park in Laurel Canyon was the setting for much ecstatic tail-wagging. Lee and Eliott, a black and white cat next door, developed a respectful, if somewhat distant relationship.
Shortly after Gloria and Lee moved to New Orleans in 1989, a dog who could have been Lee's brother appeared in the newspaper as Pet of the Week. Although timid, Alex made a point of sleeping as close to Gloria as possible, and instead of competing, Lee started to vary her nocturnal resting place, often enjoying the cool linoleum of Joel's bathroom. Alex was more puppy-like and actively playful than his sister, but they enjoyed many a vigorous romp together. When disinclined to play, Lee would show Alex her teeth in a display of mock anger, her ears out to the side making her look like a vampire bat. Of the two, Lee was always dominant and secure in her dignity; only a vacuum cleaner could unnerve her. Alex's lumbering size and unselfconscious drooling contrasted markedly with Lee's delicacy and careful step. Lee's shiny and gently wavy coat showed touches of auburn when in sunlight. As Alex put on weight, his coat became long but straighter and bushier. Whenever Joel and Gloria went out with Alex and Lee, they were met by repeated questions and compliments about the two beautiful, big, black dogs.
Between the two of them, Alex and Lee made comprised a formidable canine intellect. Not only was it impossible to touch a leash within the earshot of either dog without starting a riot, but it became necessary to learn to spell aloud when they both learned to recognize any discussion about "going for a walk." When Joel was hospitalized for a few weeks only 5 months into our marriage, Alex and Lee accompanied Gloria on long late-night walks, keeping her safe and listening to her fears and confidences.
Every year the family participated in the LA SPCA's benefit activities such as Bark in the Park and Dog Day Afternoon and also had portraits made. One such portrait caught the eye of a young pregnant woman seeking a family for her unborn infant. It is not exaggeration to say that the dogs-especially Lee-played a major role in facilitating the adoption of little Katie. Lee's gentleness and maturity had been proven during many visits to psychiatric patients at DePaul Hospital as a therapy dog, and she totally charmed the social worker from Jewish Family Services. Her trusting and devoted gaze could melt any heart. Lee never showed any jealousy of Katie-saving that instead for Solomon the parrot, adopted when Lee was eleven-and, in contrast, habitually slept just outside the baby's room. Katie learned at the earliest possible age the sacredness of the canine-. human bond, and Lee and Alex patiently learned to ignore when Katie would bring out their leashes. Katie would climb all over Alex and use him as a stair, but when she tried to do so to Lee, Lee would gently rise and walk away. Lee particularly enjoyed Katie's dinner time, and would sit in front of Katie's high chair, her graying muzzle aimed at Katie's lap. She and Alex invariably licked clean the baby's tray table. Indeed, Lee was always a prompt and fastidiously thorough cleaner of any spilled food or beverage. No wonder that Katie first learned to kiss by sticking out her tongue and waiting for Lee to do the same.
Lee's health had been generally good throughout her life. Twice she had developed lick granulomas on her leg which resulted in Joel's repeated bandaging. Once she had an apparent mammary tumor removed, which turned out to be merely a lipoma. A second lipoma was monitored but otherwise ignored. In her advancing age, Lee suffered from an indolent ulcer of the cornea that required induced abrasion and the temporary suturing shut of her eyelid for a few weeks. She was invariably sweet-tempered through these trials, and cooperative toward her veterinarian, Dr. Grisoli.
It was during our Friday night candle-lighting that we first noticed Lee's distress. Ordinarily Lee and Alex would come running as soon as they heard Gloria pulling out the Shabbat candlesticks, kiddush cup, and challah cover. That night Lee dawdled in arriving. When she dropped her taste of challah bread and did not bend to retrieve it, we were sure that she was seriously ill.
The emergency veterinarian sedated Lee before attempting to pass a stomach tube to relieve gastric pressure and abdominal bloating. She was placed in a cage fifteen feet down a hallway behind the receptionist's desk, a solid wooden door providing a visual barrier between her and tearful Gloria. At one point Lee cried softly from either the intubation efforts or the medication. The veterinary staff refused to let Gloria wait with Lee when surgery was chosen. When the door was briefly left ajar, Gloria called out softly to Lee, "It's okay sweetheart. We're here, Lee. Daddy and Katie came too. We love you, Lee." Lee raised her tired head in response. The staff closed the door.
The surgeon's report was pessimistic: Lee's abdomen was rife with neoplasmic material, most certainly malignant. She had also been hemorrhaging. Complete tumor removal was likely impossible, and little would be left of Lee's digestive system. Radiation and chemotherapy were not options. Gloria ached at the thought of losing Lee without the opportunity to say goodbye, but the veterinarian advised against allowing her to regain consciousness because of the certainty of pain and shock. Gloria and Joel watched as the large syringe of pink barbiturate was emptied into Lee's right front leg. Her breathing and heart stopped almost immediately. Joel removed Lee's collar and Gloria removed the leg restraint. They gently extubated their daughter dog and fumbled removing her IV, spraying saline. The vet sutured the long longitudinal incision. Lee's tongue drooped to one side, slightly cyanotic. Her beautiful brown eyes had lost their fire. Her perfect teeth seemed smaller and more tartar-stained. Gloria wanted to hug her, to hold her tight, to keep her. How could she face a future that denied her the sensation of Lee's sitting upright next to her, a bundle of silky, shiny fur and the deepest, most knowing eyes? "Lee, how can I live without you?" she wailed, kissing the pads of Lee's two closer feet, already cooling and no longer redolent of the backyard grass. Gloria had long considered having Lee's coat made into a simple hide so she could continue to be able to stroke that soft fur for the rest of her life. Joel balked, and the vet sided with him. Arrangements were made for Lee's cremation. Gloria cut a small lock of black and white fur from Lee's chest and wrapped it in surgical gauze.
Now Lee's remains sit atop a hutch in Gloria's bedroom/office. She also looks down upon us from pictures scattered around the house. Beautiful Lee Love, if anything resembling consciousness awaits us in the World to Come, we know that we will find you there, waiting happily and patiently for us in a place of peace and fulfillment.

Gloria Manucia