Friday, 22 March 2013

Bye Bye Dufus

On March 16th 2013, for the first time in the 7 years that I had known him, my Banfarali let me groom his entire left side in one sitting. I was surprised. Then I found a teeny clump of hair that seemed to give him some trouble. Moving it a bit, exposed a scab. I thought it was a mostly minor bed sore like the one in October 2012. I snipped away the hair and cleaned it careful, he cried in some pain. I sprinkled some turmeric just in case it had been infected and thought nothing more of it. The next day when feeding him, my husband discovered a large patch of blood on his dhoti. We weren't sure which of the three critters was bleeding. Preliminary investigation yielded nothing on the other three. And then we flipped him over. The small scab was now a large patch, bleeding profusely. We realized that it was much bigger than we could handle on our own.

The vet took us in at short notice on that Sunday, just before they closed. She took one look at him lying on his side, unable to get up from exhaustion and told us that it was time to let him go. She was very compassionate and yet tears coursed down my eyes, unstoppable. All sense of self restraint went straight out the window. I said, "But he still knows who he is". At least that is what I wanted to say. I could not get past "he". She tried to assure us that having seen him so many times, she was very convinced that it was time for him to go and that it was not fair to keep him, just for our sake. She said, "I came in expecting to have to restrain him (to clean the wounds). In all these years, I have never seen him laying like this".

He was too weak to get away from us, as the two technicians and I cleaned and shaved around his wound, with me mostly trying to hug him and reassure him that this will all be done soon. I think I said "It will get better". Empty promise. The vet told us that the infection was pretty deep. But because Dufus was such a stoic, he never ever let on. Just how much of a stoic he had been would be revealed in the next few days as the wound cried his pain.

The vet hinted that she would be willing even to put him down right away, if we wanted. My husband would have none of it. Our Slender Loris was a people's dog. The only thing he ever wanted without fail was his people by his side. Twenty four-seven, if possible. Each time either of us traveled, he would stop eating in protest. Each time the family left after a visit, he would grow restless for a few days. He realized very soon that suitcases meant travel. He started to throw anticipatory tantrums when he saw a suitcase coming out of the hated basement. We took to packing when he was not in the home, sometimes even giving him a special walk in the park so that most of the packing could be done when he was away. This was not a dog we could simply say bye to at the drop of a hat. We needed to spend some quality time with him and if possible have him spend some quality time with everyone else that he loved and that loved him right back!

Euthanasia is a small word that packs a big punch. Straight to your solar plexus. We were already warned of his deteriorating health earlier in 2012. He was losing weight at an alarming rate and all the tests revealed that his organs were strong and there was no cancer. He did have Alzheimer's, they said, but no cancer. No one knew how quickly or what trajectory that illness would take. Turns out it proceeded too quickly for us. His hind legs lost their muscle mass almost completely. Very soon his abdominal muscles weakened as well. Just as everything else in his life, his departure was also progressing at great speed.

The dog that was used to flying at us at Mach speeds (see more about this here) to greet us everyday, could not hear us returning from work. This was the only good thing, because that meant he feared the thunderstorms a little less. We had a more peaceful summer since he was mostly unaware of the raging storms outside. This peace was short lived because his arthritis and neurological decline kept pace with his declining hearing. He had a hard time squatting to poop and it would take really long walks before he could relieve himself.  Finally it had got to the point where we had taken for granted that he would only poop in his sleep, because he was finally relaxed enough to stop holding it back. This earned him yet another moniker: Poop Aandavar (Lord of the Poop).  We made jokes, we did more laundry than ever before, but underneath it all was the half acknowledged truth that the end was nigh.

March 17th was when we met the vet. After his first dose of antibiotics, we realized the extent of infection on his hip and the extent of his stoicism. The dog must have been in excruciating pain. And he never let on. Until, he simply could not hide it any more! For how long, exactly? We will never know. We let the rest of the family know. Everyone went through the phase of denial. No one wanted to believe that the dog who climbed the Franconia Notch trails like a sherpa in 2011 was done with his life. Dufus himself wasn't willing to believe that his physical body was not as strong as his spirit was.

Despite all the pain, he would insist on getting up and walking although he could not get up on his own any more. We had to help him up each time and he would wobble until he almost fell, at which point we would lower him down gently so that he wouldn't hurt himself crash landing! He would rest a little and try again. He could not stand long enough in front of his bowl to drink his water. Someone had to hold his hind quarters up while he tried hard to drink. His Alzheimer's made him too uncoordinated to drink from his bowl. Most of the time his tongue was licking air. We resorted to giving him his water through a bottle. The same bottle that had accompanied us on many a happy hikes and trips. He drank out of it just the same way he did on those hikes which made other dog owners stop in their tracks and exclaim, "Wow! Wish my dog would drink like that!"

My sister commuted from my place to work every day during his last week. Both my husband and I took time off work so one of us could be with him 24/7. Just the way he would have liked! My sister's husband and the other sister came in to spend sometime with him. He will get a real family send off that befits his huge heart. This Saturday I will say my byes to my puppy.

Sorry that I could not stop the thunderstorms or the fireworks. Sorry I could not make you understand that no matter where I go, I will always come back to you. Sorry your body broke down much much before your spirit was ready for it. But if there is such a thing as another chance at this thing called life, I wish you a strong body to match your spirit. So leave your broken body to the Fire and Earth, may the showers grow flowers were you trod; let your spirit fly strong into the wind and occupy all of the universe.

Bye my precious!

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Monday, 11 March 2013

Psychopath

Microfiction. Warning: Please don't read if you are offended by or do not like psycho-thrillers. Some language may be offensive to some people. Not suitable for young children.


I am a psychopath. It's their fault really. I cannot help myself. It's just the way they make me feel when they strut about in front of me. They got to my stuff, one time. Now, I don't tolerate no one getting to my stuff. So you see? It's not my fault. They started it.

I have my weapon cocked and ready as I sit in the silence of the darkness, waiting for them. I know they will come. They always do. It starts at the twilight hour and it goes on and on into the wee hours of the night.

Sometimes they come in singly. Sometimes in pairs and I see them making out. Making out! Can you believe that? Right in front of my eyes! Making babies, just like them! To start the cycle again! Vermin! One time, I discovered a whole lot of their babies huddling together. I fed the whole lot of them to the birds.

For the adults, I usually use my weapon. They are pretty slow, so usually I get them in a couple of tries. Sometime I slam them against the wall. Sometimes I simply water board them. But they still keep coming. I dream of the day when I will rid the universe of them forever.

Wham! Down goes one more. My weapon is better than any anti-aircraft guns. Die, pantry moth, die!  I am almost all out of plain vinegar in my spray bottle.
For the next batch, I will use some orange peels in the vinegar. No harm in making the home smell divine while I get rid of these pesky pests!

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Tuesday, 19 February 2013

Guest Post: Dr. WaMu, Resident Hydrologist.

Hello there! It's me, Dr. WaMu. It's been a long while since anyone wrote about me and my exploits.  Lots of water has flown under the bridge, and in that time, I have acquired a PhD in Hydrology and now work as Senior Resident Hydrologist at my home.
I am all grown up now and very serious


Let me first inform you, I am no more the "little kid" that my Mom wrote about way back when. (See [1] for more information). So don't go expecting any cutesy/humorous stories about me in this post. I am too grown up for such trivia. I take my profession very seriously. It's my life's ambition to get a Nature paper out on the structure and properties of water. That veritable fascinating compound, that life giving force, the thing that shimmers in the light and slips and slithers all about you enticingly.

OK, so I get a little lyrical about my life's passion, but you would too, if you have spent all your life studying it like I have. If you think everything that needs to be discovered about water has already been discovered, I must regretfully inform you that you must needs get back to your research. One of these days my discoveries will lead to a Nobel prize in Physics, just you wait.

Dr. WaMu displays his water divining methods at his laboratory

My human guardian is very encouraging of my interests. (I still need a human guardian because I have no opposable thumbs, not because I am young). The other day, she even bought me a special translucent square beaker and filled it all with water. In fact, it was a special device that allowed water to fall from one part to another and purified it in the process. I think she called it "filter". I was fascinated by it. I mean it's great to have water, but to have running water that is pure, that's just a hydrologist's dream!

I got to experimenting with the thing as soon as she brought it home. I patted the thing experimentally. Lo and behold, the water played inside with me. So I patted it some more with the other paw and it correspondingly sloshed on the other side. So far, so good. It was behaving as the laws of Physics would dictate.

But I had to study it more. I wanted to see how far up the wall of the "filter" I could make my water climb before gravity took over. So, I whacked it hard. The water made some serious waves. I got all excited, so WHAM! I went on the other side. All on a sudden I had the most beautiful Milikan's oil drop-like experiment in front of me (See [2] for the Milikan's oil-drop experiment. Except I didn't have any fancy electrodes and I am not all that interested in oil. So make adjustments to your imaginations accordingly). The whole equipment slid off the lab desk (which for some reason the human companion refers to as "kitchen island") and made a lovely arc through the air. I watched very carefully as the water made neat little drops in the air as it dislodged itself from the main body of the so called filter. I wish I had a high speed camera to record it for posterity. No matter. I have a photographic memory. That will do for now, until I get enough funding to acquire an actual camera like that. And may be another chunk of money to get myself some opposable thumbs (you can't always depend on the humans to do your bidding, see?).

Oh and in case you are wondering, that piece of equipment was deemed unusable after I was done with my experiment. I think it was all worth it in the name of Science. However, I have a sneaky suspicion that my human caretaker does not quite view it that way. She made quite the pouty face when she absorbed all the water up into a dirty rag before I could take my final readings. Sacrilege!

After that incident though she never really bought me another one of those beakers. Instead she got something that fixes straight to the tap. It's not such a good equipment, in my opinion, since you really can't observe the water in its "element" as it were. I have tried telling her that, but she insists that the filter was not meant for me at all in the first place. Phbbt! Yeah, right!

She is always buying me stuff, but for some reason she does not want to let on that she cares about my work. For instance, sometime in Spring, she got me this other lovely glass thing (I love all transparent/translucent things, but most of all I love water) and then filled it with water. Why would she do that, if it was not for me? Then she put some interesting things in it that she got from the garden. So, I now use this new equipment for my surface tension experiments. I tear off some of the interesting things from the garden and then drop it into the water to observe its behavior. Fascinating stuff. I could work all day with equipment like this. I am very dedicated to my Science like that.

Glass beaker with interesting things from the garden
Anyhow, that's it for now. I have to rush off and work on my paper. It's a publish or perish world out here!

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Sunday, 3 February 2013

Coconut Milk, Chia Seeds Vegan "Paal Paayasam"

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If you are trying to do away with dairy and reducing your grain consumption; but you still want a paal paayasam (Southern Indian milk-rice pudding) fix, this is a recipe for you.

Stuff you need:

3/4 of a can Coconut milk, rich creamy (not the stuff you get in cartons).
1/4 cup chia seeds
1 cardamom pod
1 teaspoon vanilla extract (the real stuff not fake)
Stevia to taste (remember stevia is pretty sweet, so taste as you add).

What to do:

Take a clean glass bottle with a lid
Pour the coconut milk into the bottle
Add the chia seeds a little at a time and stir around. (They tend to clump easily. If this happens, you can fish the clumps out and break them up with a spoon).
Break the cardamom pod and crush the cardamom "seeds"
Add the teaspoon of vanilla extract to the mixture.
Add this to the bottle.
Add stevia to taste
Close the lid and shake well. Really well.
Check to see if you have chia seed clumps.
Put it in the fridge for about two hours.
Enjoy your "paal payasam"!
Garnish with cashews, almonds, coconut flakes or saffron.

So next festival that calls for paal paayasam, you have a healthy option!
No pictures, sorry. Apparently I have exceeded Google's quota on pictures. So unless I figure out how to link pictures from a Flickr account, there will be no pictures in this blog!


Notes:





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