
Originally Posted by
gbrice75;63***69
I'm literally going through this situation right now. In fact, I have to (but have been delaying) call the vet to make an appt. to put down one of my dogs, a nearly 15 year old border collie mix who is like my own child. We've had her since she was 3 months old.
Same situation - she paces ALL DAY LONG. Often circles... the vet believes it's some sort of tumor on the brain and her issues are neurological more than anything else. She has otherwise been a completely healthy dog her entire life, literally never been to the vet for an illness, not once in 14+ years.
My wife and I have cried together several times over this already. I mean, we knew it comes coming, nobody lives forever, but now that it's real, and close, it's hitting hard. We just can't imagine our lives without her. We've been together for 19 years and this dog has been there with us for nearly 15 of those years. I don't even remember life without her.
I don't mean to make this about my story, I apologize, I'm just empathizing with you. My whole point here is that we of course want to keep her around as long as possible... after all, there's nothing REALLY wrong with her, internally... organs are fine, she still has a (voracious) appetite, etc. But, you can see that her spark is gone... her light is out... there's just a different look in her eyes, what used to be sharp is now dull... not to mention she was 40lbs her entire life and is now 33lbs.... just wasting away. We are trying to come to terms with the fact that putting her down is probably best for HER. While she might not be suffering (and who really knows, maybe she is, it's not like she can tell us), she certainly isn't happy, or living a quality life now, and she's like a stranger compared to the dog we used to know. I can't even remember the last time I heard her voice (bark).
I would try to have a REAL heart to heart with your mother and try to help her understand what's best for the dog vs. her own feelings. Be understanding and compassionate for her pain, because I can tell you first hand that it's tough. What really got us on board with doing the 'deed' is the fact that while she seems relatively 'comfortable' now, the vet said if things worsen (and assuming it is the tumor she believes it to be (non cancerous mind you)), she could have a seizure.
Ideally, we'd wake up one morning and she will have passed in her sleep. BEST case scenario. But physically, I don't think this dog is ready to go yet. So our options boil down to - putting her down which is at least peaceful, or risk her having a violet death during a seizure. I think the choice is clear.
Good luck to you brother, please keep us posted and if you wanna PM about this, feel free.