For Murphy: A Memorial.
John Grogan's book
Marley and Me: Life with the Worst Dog Ever
made one thing abundantly clear. John Grogan never knew Murphy.
When Kathy and I were in graduate school, we really wanted a dog. "How
much work could that be?" we wondered. After all, we were both done
with our master's degrees and on our way to becoming PhDs - we should
be able to figure out dog ownership (so we thought!).
We picked up Murphy when she was about 8 weeks old from a farm in Mass.
Half husky - that much was known about her. Probably some Aussie or
Border Collie in there too. Kathy and I didn't think to look up the
traits of huskies - we just knew they were cool dogs!
Well Murphy taught us about huskies very quickly. Huskies are known to
be smart - they're also known for having lots of energy (they've been
bred to run over 20 miles a day in the freezing cold) - they are escape
artists - and they are "pack oriented" (read as: They don't want to be
alone!).
Turns out they can be destructive too!
Murphy was something else. The amount of trouble she made was
extraordinary. Off the bat, she refused to be crated. She'd make this
horrible howling noise for hours if she was in her crate. She also
figured out how to get out of crates - and she escaped from no less
than 3 crates - destroying two of them. And did she HATE to be alone!
Every time we'd come home - starting when she was a pup - and not
ending until the end - we never knew what we were going to come home
to. Ripped up couch. Hole through a door. Hole through a wall. Ripped
up shoes. A whole birthday cake on the counter that's no longer there.
Chewed up batteries - chewed up razors. Sand all over the kitchen table
(where, according to our neighbor, she'd lay all day looking out the
window - waiting for us). Cat litter all over the house. A hole in the
door that goes to the cat-litter room - and cat litter all over the
house again. Molding of doors chewed to dust. Carpet ripped up and
shredded - permanently destroyed.
When we moved to New Paltz, we tried to fence her. We knew that she
could scale chain-link fences of any height (yes, she had gotten over
multiple 8-foot fences) - so we paid LOTS of money to get a sheer,
cedar fence with no lips that she could climb up on. 6 feet high. She
got over it. She got under it. She went through it. All multiple times.
Kennels would turn her down. Every time we had a pet sitter, we'd come
home to shredded wood and carpet bits all over the place. We tried
every single anti-anxiety drug - high doses. One made her pee in the
house. None solved the separation anxiety problem. At all. One doctor
looked us in the eye and recommended a doggy lobotomy. Seriously.
The kind folks at Gardiner Vet agreed to kennel her when we'd vacation
during her later years. Each time we'd get her from the vet, she'd be
missing another tooth from her incessant attempts to be free. Imagine,
that was the BEST we could do to accommodate her when we went away.
With this all said, Murphy, the REAL worst dog in the world, had a
heart of gold. She never hurt anyone - not a kid - not another animal -
not even an old person (even though she used to herd old people when
we'd be hiking in the woods - that never exactly won her any points
...). And her independent, energetic spirit changed me entirely. In
retrospect, it's clear that I owe so much to her.
You see, back in the early 90s, I was what you might call a lazy lump.
Beer and TV, what else did you need? I had no interest in exercise or
the outdoors. But when Murphy entered our lives, it was clear that she
needed exercise - which meant that I needed to get her that exercise.
So I started hiking a little. It was easy to find trails - we were in
New Hampshire. Within 10 minutes of our apartment we could find 5 great
places with trails. Then I learned that hiking is actually interesting
and fun - who knew!?? Ultimately, Murphy and I scaled Mt. Washington,
Katahdin, and Adams - and we nearly made it to the top of Mt. Hood (see
photo above). I now hike as much as I possibly can.
Of course, hiking a lot had little effect on Murphy's anxiety and
destructiveness - so I started to let her run. I'd throw a ball and
she'd run to get it. But she never brought it back! So I decided I'd
run
with her. That was 1995. Then I found that running is interesting and
fun! That really surprised me. Murphy became my marathon-training
partner. She'd run over 20 miles with me in the dead of the Maine
winter or the dog days of a New York summer. She could just go and go
and go! And, of course, even if she'd just run 15 miles - she was just
as likely to totally destroy the house if you left her!
With a total non-runner's body, I've completed 7 marathons - and I have
one first-place trophy to show for it - (of course that's in my
category - of like 5 guys - none in great shape ... but still ...).
Thanks Murph!
Dispositionally, she oscillated between friendly and apathetic. She was
either happy to see everyone - or she just kept to herself in a corner.
As long as you were with her, she was fine - (unless it thundered, of
course - when she turned into Linda Blair ...).
She may not have been the best dog. OK, I do think we can make a good
case that she was the worst. But she was ours - and we loved her.
Murphy's health went downhill gradually. Cancerous lumps removed twice.
She was actually OK from that. But then she developed some sort of
vague neurological condition - she lost functioning of one of her back
legs - and then, slowly, she started losing all kinds of other
functions. She eventually totally lost it.
13 years. Not your average dog. Troublesome as she was, she is sorely
missed.
Rest in peace Murphy Mo. We love you.
Glenn, Kathy, Megan, and Andrew