Pill-popping puppy.
Here’s the deal. This is going to be a whole lotta words about a dog. A dog named Ethel. And yeah, while I guess you could call it “boring,” I shall choose to refer to it as, “RIVETING,” and, “PULITZER-WORTHY.”

Pitiful.
After a harrowing and throw-uppy weekend, Ethel made a turn for the better just about the time I wanted to go to sleep last night. After spending the entire weekend catering to her Every Single Need, cleaning up after her, and taking out a seventeenth mortgage on my non-existent home, she thanked me wholeheartedly by wanting to play at precisely the moment I gave out from exhaustion. Don’t get me wrong—I am extremely grateful that she’s feeling better. I’m extremely grateful to have this silly animal to cry over more times than I will ever admit. I am extremely grateful she is mine.
The timing just sucks is all.

Druggy.
On Saturday morning during our emergency vet visit, the short, bald, and extremely hilarious doctor in novelty scrubs and Crocs prescribed a week’s worth of tablet forms of Amoxicillin and Metronidazole, along with a probiotic gel to eradicate the yeast infection in her gut that resulted from the “massive” bacterial infection in her gut. Guts all around! Gutariffic! Guttastic!

Doodlebug in bed.
Even with all the wimping around and the puniness and the general drugged-outedness around the apartment this weekend, my 11-month-old puppy has taken the medicating-the-dog thing to an all-new level. We’ve been through this before, though only with one pill for three days and some mighty delicious Pepto Bismol to chase it. The medicating-the-dog thing? Not so much working out these days.
I learned early on in our relationship that my dog is very much afraid of allowing her teeth to come into contact with human flesh. I am not sure what brought about this phobia—and by the other ways she acts and especially around teenaged boys, I have a feeling a teenaged boy with not-so-kind intentions was involved in this matter—but it’s been a kind of nice outcome of what seems to have been a not-so-nice start in life. We can play rough but as soon as she gets a taste of my hand or leg, she takes herself out of the game until I utter a magical “ok” to start the fun again. I thought, Hey, this will be nice and useful and fun and to my advantage in administering the pills.
Ha. The first dose was traumatic. They’d drugged her up something awful at the vet and she had no idea what was happening when I tried to shove a pill-filled meatball down her throat. Well, ok, to her credit, I did first offer it to her peacefully and meticulously wrapped as a little antibiotic gift from Nutro. She wonkedly sampled the fare and upon discovering the secreted tablet, as a princess on a stack of mattresses, she looked at me, disbelieving, sprouted English, and exclaimed, “Woman, look! A pill! Who would play such a nasty trick on the both of us? I am so glad I found it before we both were fooled!”
So I resorted to shoving, and I think she got half of each pill and most of the squirt of probiotic, simply out of confusion for what it was I hoped to accomplish by filling her mouth with bitter, medicated filth. She passed out on my lap for a good three hours and I had to tell her three times to go to bed—not because she was disobedient, but because in her haze, she simply forgot what it was I wanted her to do along the winding, five-foot path from my bed to hers. And then she threw up. Again. Twice.

If you want sympathy and you know it, roll your eyes.
Then came Sunday morning. She was far more lucid and far better at refusing to have enter her mouth any form of anything ever, including otherwise deliciously bland “intestinal distress” food and Pedialyted-up-the-wazoo water. I think somewhere along the seventh time she’d thrown up in a twelve-hour window, it was decided that nourishment might be involved and she denied it entrance to her system.
I’d gone out late on Saturday to procure some peanut butter, since the Internet said it would work. Which is funny. Because she isn’t mean about it—in factm she’s downright sweet about the fact that she simply refuses to partake of the medication. Because she has taken up a strict policy of civil disobedience and Hello Internet, meet my dog, GHANDI.
As you might have been able to deduce, the peanut butter didn’t work. Ok, fine, it worked the first time in that she choked enough that either she swallowed the pill or propelled it across the room and in a few weeks when I am packing up all my things to FINALLY MOVE, I will find a shriveled-up Amoxicillin surrounded by ants who ventured to its peanut-buttery goodness and died because apparently, taking a pill is THAT BAD. That’s what Ethel says, and she wants all the ants to know it.

You’ve got a little crumb there, sport.
Monday morning brought the return of food—in fact, ravenous eating of food and slurping of Pedialyted water and a general improvement in attitude. And among the fabulous new traits accompanying the new found energy was the renewed fervency and great desire to make Mama go mad with the NO PILLS, PLEASE. I stopped by Walgreen’s for a medicine dropper (I’m thinking that with all my prescriptions and the jumper cables and the recent drug paraphernalia related to medicating my dog, that we’re in for a Christmas card this year) in hopes that one or both of the pills would dissolve into a paste I could shoot into her mouth. For good measure and in case that didn’t work, I also went to PetCo for a pill shooter
Tuesday afternoon at work, I found myself dreading the medication mayhem that was sure to ensue that evening. I called the veterinarian’s office and My dog LAUGHS in the general direction of your CHEESE and your HOTDOGS and your PEANUT BUTTER and your LITTLE TINY MEATBALLS MADE FROM VERY OTHERWISE-DELICIOUS AND -APPEALING WET FOOD, you silly little man!
“Actually, we’ve gone that enticing and disgustingly messy route and until today she’d refused to eat because of it and all the vomiting FROM NOT GETTING HER MEDICINE, so if you have any other suggestions, I wouldn’t mind hearing them.”
“Oh, I didn’t know you’d tried all that. I know, I’ll leave this device called a ‘pill pusher’ at the desk for you to pick up.”
Haaaaaaaaaaa.
So yeah. Besides helping me to feel more like an idiot for my inability to successfully choke my dog—”You know, we have to get her the medicine or we won’t get better,” and I guess the royal “we” was warranted, because you’re right, “we” won’t get better until she gets the meds because “we” are thinking seriously about investing in a dog straight jacket and also some sweet, sweet wine for mama.
Tuesday night, this morning, and this evening, I went the traditional route, which involves wearing down her will to refuse until she doesn’t even know anymore if she has the pill in her mouth or not, and she looks at me and says, “Here’s the thing. I think I may have swallowed it after all. You go about your, ‘GOOD GIRL SUCH A GOOD GIRL WHO’S MAMA’S GOOD GIRL YOU’RE MAMA’S GOOD GOOD GIRL,’ business and I’ll act like I wanted the pill the entire time.”
Okay, so I didn’t want to laugh– who laughs at sick puppy and distraught mama? not I, assuredly.
I’m so lying. I have tears streaming down my face and I definately think this is the funniest post ever. Maybe because we’ve all been there, myself a few times. You definately make being up at 3:50 am with sciatica pain totally worth it.
(i tried to think of a sentence with MCUH but I am mcuh too tired right now to come up with anything good.)
7 September 2006 at 1:50ps I almost choked on my own saliva I was laughing so hard at the crumb picture.
7 September 2006 at 1:51Awwww. Pulitzer for sure.
Do I have to go to work? I’d rather just type at you.
7 September 2006 at 6:21Oy, I’m half sorry I asked for an update! :-)
(Oh, and by the way, injecting liquid meds into a baby/toddler isn’t very different from what you went through with Ethel…)
7 September 2006 at 15:33you have WAY more patience than you give yourself credit. I’da been like, “ok, having a dog was fun for a while… Floie, wanna dog?” because I’m just mothering like that.
7 September 2006 at 16:48Wow you’re good at taking pictures.
28 September 2006 at 7:17