I have an old friend who’s dying. You won’t read his obituary in the paper when it happens. I’m the only one who’ll notice or care. But my world will feel a little bit empty when Thomas leaves me very soon.
Some of you who have dogs or cats know the incredible attachment that many of us feel for the furry friends in our lives. They’re not just animals. They’re family. We feel real love for them — and they they need us, many times in ways that make you certain they’re capable of feeling more than some people believe.
Thomas is about 18 years old. I told the story last August of how he came to live with me, so I won’t repeat it here. He wasn’t supposed to end up here. If a woman had done what she promised to do for him, he would have ended up spending his life on a farm not too far from here. But since she didn’t, I ended up scooping him up in my arms and carrying him half a mile or so home. He’s never left — and he’s spent a good deal of the time since then in my arms.
He’s been going downhill badly since January. He’s always been a jumper, and even in his old age, he still jumped to the top of the bookcases to sleep and be alone. One day in January, he apparently fell off the top of the bookcase. He had done that many times, but this time he fell behind it, jamming his body between the wall and the bookcase almost all the way to the ground.

Danger of Iran war getting stronger because of blindness, hypocrisy
What really caused me to run from a ‘haunted house’ long ago?
Gingrich threatens to skip debates if he can’t dictate audience rules
The time is rapidly coming when I’m quitting Facebook for good
Didn’t we already try secession? Politicians don’t like losing control
Would you be glad or ashamed if others could read your thoughts?
After years of silence, it’s time to tell the truth about my father
We’re all broken, but some of us find meaning in broken partners
I’ve lost all interest in begging anyone to fix the political system