MISSING SADIE MAE


When I was growing up, there really wasn’t room in the bank account for our mother, Jinni, raising three children on her own….to provide us with a pet. But regardless of our slim funds, Jinni always managed to keep us happy. There was the occasional bowl of gold fish, and our turtle we named IKE. But being desperate to be like the other children in our neighborhood, we devised a way to take Ike out onto Wood Street, where he soon after died, probably because you can’t pull a slow turtle down a sidewalk and expect him to enjoy it.
But then, after awhile, there was a major change, there was PETER FRITZ, a gold-colored canary. We set up a wire birdcage in the corner of our dining room, opposite where Jinni had her typewriter and table of the necessary things one needs type insurance policies and thus raise we three children.
This was a very big deal for Jinni to allow us to have this PET. All our friends had dogs–but Jinni made it very clear that dogs cost money and would require more work on our part. SO…we settled for the bird…this after Bill and I tried to walk a turtle down Wood Street by tying a string around his neck…truly not a cruel act on our part….we just desperately WANTED A PET.
And then our dream came true, we had this lovely canary, we all eagerly awaiting a lovely song to proceed from his throat. But maybe Peter Fritz (named because I wanted to call him Peter, and my older brother John wanted to name him after the musical conductor Fritz Reiner, a common thread in our family, using names that no one else would ever use, one gold fish named Igor, after Igor Stravinsky…) But this is totally okay! We were always a music loving family, my father having one of the first phonographs that allowed him to also record our voices. And this became a true miracle, his encouraging voice also being recorded (though I refused to speak)…so that when our father died a year later…wow, we had his amazing deep voice recorded. But that death also meant that when I came home from high school and found Peter Fritz lying on the floor of his bird cage, I called my mother at her office, begging her to do something. But there was nothing to do. The bird had died, but even so, we will offer our profound human love to a bird, a cat, and very often a dog, who we somehow believe will be with us forever.
And then….much later….there was Sadie Mae, the beloved pet of our daughter Christie and her family…a poole mix, the first dog I ever truly loved my entire life…Sadie Mae, who died this week. And now we are all missing her, remembering how sweet she was, how protective she was and so caring of Christie’s children. A dog who learned about love from her family, and thus from the very beginning showed us how she LOVED HER PEOPLE, her people always loving her back. Sadie creating a game with me when she discovered a newly purchased bag of apples and sent them rolling along Christie’s kitchen floor. It became a game that I would struggle to win. Sadie loved it. And the time I had brought dark chocolate to the house, and somehow she got up on the counter and I found her trying to eat it. This required a trip to the vet…but we were fortunate and Sadie was okay.
Sadie of the LONG LIFE. Sadie of the GOOD LIFE. She will be missed forever….puppy, charmer, lover, and giver into her old age. And if you know the phrase A Dog’s Life to be one of goodness and love….Sadie certainly had A Dog’s Best Life.











