A place to remember and to heal from losing your beloved corgi
Members: 43
Latest Activity: Feb 12, 2019
Started by Rhonda. Last reply by Ed and Michelle Nov 15, 2011. 6 Replies 0 Likes
We lost another one of our dearest Corgi angel's last week, Andy who was 12 years old. Only 4 months after our other Corgi, Barney. We are in shock and completely devastated. I was with my angel's…Continue
Started by Connie Rose. Last reply by Dave Bennett Dec 28, 2010. 12 Replies 0 Likes
I lost my corgi, Langston, 4 weeks ago today on Oct 1 and I'm still devastated. He was 11 1/2 and seemed to be a healthy, happy corgi with many years ahead. And around Aug he became very…Continue
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This is my Eddie ~ I lost him in Sept. 2009, and it broke my heart. He had slipped on the ice during the previous winter (probably chasing squirrels, his favorite thing to do), and his back was damaged. At first, he just acted like an old man with a bad back...but he only got worse. The vet we took him to didn't treat his back, only his pain. I should've never trusted him. Eddie was getting steroid shots to relieve the swelling that was going on in his back. It helped...for a moment, that's all. He got worse and worse, couldn't walk or lay down or get comfortable or sleep or eat or anything after awhile. Then he developed acites from the steroids ~ he swelled up like a balloon...and that only made things worse. He wouldn't come out from under the front deck for days on end, obviously in pain and deeply depressed. I cried every day. Finally, I couldn't take it anymore...his pain was too much, and I was unable to fix him. So when I got home that night, I sat out on the front steps and told him how sorry I was that I couldn't fix him...but I could take away all the pain. I told him what I was going to do the next day and I sat on those steps and cried for what seemed to be forever. (whew ~ this is much harder than I thought it was gonna be...) So the next day we took him to a different vet who was so empathetic and kind...she helped us all that day. We took my Eddie home and buried him in his favorite position, with his favorite blanket, his favorite toy, and three Pupperoni's~ his favorite treat. The new vet sent me a card telling me about the Rainbow Bridge (I had never heard of it before), so I hold this belief that I will be with him again someday, and that he is on the bridge waiting for me....
My Nina was only four years old when she made her journey to Rainbow Bridge.
She'd always been very healthy, active, and full of life. Then in November, she began having seizures. Not too bad, but enough to give me quite a scare. After a visit to the vet, we put her on a low dose of phenobarbital and began treatment for epilepsy.
Then late one night, Nina went into massive seizures that kept coming. I took her to our emergency vet and raised the dosage.
Within a few weeks after that, she grew beligerant with the family and even bit me. She continued to have the seizures and had lost all control of her bowels. It was then that I knew in my heart that we weren't dealing with epilepsy. Something was seriously wrong. And I was right. There was a brain tumor that couldn't be removed without risking her life.
So we waited a couple of weeks until my husband came home from Afghanistan so he could say goodbye.
She passed peacefully on January 17th, 2011 in my arms knowing how much we loved her and how incredibly special she was to us.
Nina saw me through two of my husband's deployments, the death of my father, and my battle with breast cancer. All the while, my Nina never left my side.
I had her cremated and her ashes rest on my fireplace mantle. We will be moving to South Carolina this summer and will take her ashes to the ocean she so loved to play in and scatter her ashes there.
I miss her terribly. Perhaps one day I'll be able to talk and think about her without the tears.
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