By Sean Dietrich, Sean of the South
Commentary
The man had a dream. In this dream, he died. It happened so quickly he almost didn’t know life was over. One minute he was alive; the next, poof, he was organic fertilizer.
Sean Dietrich (Photo courtesy of seandietrich.com)
He went to Beulah Land. And it was the whole heavenly enchilada. Everything you’d expect. Mother-of-pearl gates. Twenty-four-carat streets. Greenery everywhere. Like the opening scenes of “The Sound of Music” minus the twirling nun.
The first to approach him was an old man. “We’ve been expecting you,” said the oldster. “There are a lot of excited souls waiting for you.”
“There are?”
“Oh, yes.”
The gates opened. The first soul to come barreling out of the gate was four-legged. Blonde. Slender. Like a pixie. She was the man’s first dog, a long time ago.
“Goldy!” the man shouted. And he was 10 years old again.
This was the dog that raised him. He got her when he was a boy. He picked her out of a cardboard box. She peed on him. She chewed everything he owned.
She was his best friend. Not metaphorically.
Goldy was with him during the suicide of his father. She was with him through the growing pains of adolescence. Through voice changes. Bad grades. Middle-school crushes.
She was with him until her little body gave out. The boy buried her beneath a cedar tree. He didn’t eat for three days.
Next out of the gate came a chocolate Lab. She was sprinting toward him. Tongue flapping in the wind.
Cody. She had originally been his father’s dog. But after his father’s untimely death, the boy inherited this dog. That’s just how it works.
She was a tender animal. A country dog. And a survivor. She survived copperhead bites, arsenic poisonings from cattle farmers, near drownings, and the one time the boy’s little sister made the poor dog wear a tutu.
But no dog can survive old age. Every dog must fall. Every animal’s breaths are numbered. Them’s the rules.
Cody leapt against him and he fell backward. He was laughing like a teenager. He was so happy his heart hurt.
Next came Lady. All black. Long ears. Pure cocker spaniel. She was a stray. The man found her when he was 15 years old. She came wandering through his neighborhood and landed on his doorstep when he had nobody to love him.
The kid put up “found” posters. Surely an animal this wonderful would have an owner who was just sick over their missing dog.
But nobody claimed her.
Well, it was their loss. For one decade Lady slept at the foot of the young man’s bed. She loved Hank Senior. Loved TCBY. She growled at the young man’s girlfriend because Lady was an excellent judge of character.
When Lady died, he buried her in the woods behind Walmart. Her favorite patch of woods.
A cop found him trespassing on the vacant lot with a shovel, carrying heavy black plastic bag. The boy was crying so hard he couldn’t breathe.
“You’re not supposed to be here,” said the officer. “This is private property.”
But in the end, the officer helped the boy dig the hole.
Next out of the gate came Boone, Hurley, and Gurgle. Three brothers. Border collie-Lab mixes. Long hair. Zest for life.
Hurley was hit by a car. Gurgle died on the floor of the doctor’s office. Boone died in the young man’s arms.
Next came Ellie Mae. The black and tan bloodhound. She bolted out of the gate and like a girl chasing the Beatles. Her loose jowls must have been eight feet long.
“Ellie Mae!” the young man screamed, and his voice broke.
He loved Ellie Mae in a unique way. They were close.
When she was a younger pup, they wrestled every night after supper. She rode shotgun in his vehicle, every blessed day of her life. She slept next to him each night, pressed against the crook of his back. She was The Dog.
When Ellie Mae died, the young man’s world went black. But today, in this ethereal place, Ellie was strong, fit, happy. No hip problems. No pain. No white hair around the muzzle. No pancreatitis.
So here they were. The young man and all his dogs.
He was lying there on the heavenly floor, in the dirt, getting lovingly mauled by canines. Rolling around. Laughing. Smiling. Playing. Running. Shouting.
Funny. He’d always thought heaven was a place where people sang Gloria Gaither hit singles and wore bleached underpants. But heaven was so much more.
Heaven was a place where, for all eternity, and still a thousand eternities to come, you could have dog hair on your long white robe.
They say there are no tears in heaven. But, oh, they lied.
Sean Dietrich (Photo courtesy of seandietrich.com)
Sean of the South: Beulah Land
By Sean Dietrich, Sean of the South
Commentary
The man had a dream. In this dream, he died. It happened so quickly he almost didn’t know life was over. One minute he was alive; the next, poof, he was organic fertilizer.
Sean Dietrich (Photo courtesy of seandietrich.com)
He went to Beulah Land. And it was the whole heavenly enchilada. Everything you’d expect. Mother-of-pearl gates. Twenty-four-carat streets. Greenery everywhere. Like the opening scenes of “The Sound of Music” minus the twirling nun.
The first to approach him was an old man. “We’ve been expecting you,” said the oldster. “There are a lot of excited souls waiting for you.”
“There are?”
“Oh, yes.”
The gates opened. The first soul to come barreling out of the gate was four-legged. Blonde. Slender. Like a pixie. She was the man’s first dog, a long time ago.
“Goldy!” the man shouted. And he was 10 years old again.
This was the dog that raised him. He got her when he was a boy. He picked her out of a cardboard box. She peed on him. She chewed everything he owned.
She was his best friend. Not metaphorically.
Goldy was with him during the suicide of his father. She was with him through the growing pains of adolescence. Through voice changes. Bad grades. Middle-school crushes.
She was with him until her little body gave out. The boy buried her beneath a cedar tree. He didn’t eat for three days.
Next out of the gate came a chocolate Lab. She was sprinting toward him. Tongue flapping in the wind.
Cody. She had originally been his father’s dog. But after his father’s untimely death, the boy inherited this dog. That’s just how it works.
She was a tender animal. A country dog. And a survivor. She survived copperhead bites, arsenic poisonings from cattle farmers, near drownings, and the one time the boy’s little sister made the poor dog wear a tutu.
But no dog can survive old age. Every dog must fall. Every animal’s breaths are numbered. Them’s the rules.
Cody leapt against him and he fell backward. He was laughing like a teenager. He was so happy his heart hurt.
Next came Lady. All black. Long ears. Pure cocker spaniel. She was a stray. The man found her when he was 15 years old. She came wandering through his neighborhood and landed on his doorstep when he had nobody to love him.
The kid put up “found” posters. Surely an animal this wonderful would have an owner who was just sick over their missing dog.
But nobody claimed her.
Well, it was their loss. For one decade Lady slept at the foot of the young man’s bed. She loved Hank Senior. Loved TCBY. She growled at the young man’s girlfriend because Lady was an excellent judge of character.
When Lady died, he buried her in the woods behind Walmart. Her favorite patch of woods.
A cop found him trespassing on the vacant lot with a shovel, carrying heavy black plastic bag. The boy was crying so hard he couldn’t breathe.
“You’re not supposed to be here,” said the officer. “This is private property.”
But in the end, the officer helped the boy dig the hole.
Next out of the gate came Boone, Hurley, and Gurgle. Three brothers. Border collie-Lab mixes. Long hair. Zest for life.
Hurley was hit by a car. Gurgle died on the floor of the doctor’s office. Boone died in the young man’s arms.
Next came Ellie Mae. The black and tan bloodhound. She bolted out of the gate and like a girl chasing the Beatles. Her loose jowls must have been eight feet long.
“Ellie Mae!” the young man screamed, and his voice broke.
He loved Ellie Mae in a unique way. They were close.
When she was a younger pup, they wrestled every night after supper. She rode shotgun in his vehicle, every blessed day of her life. She slept next to him each night, pressed against the crook of his back. She was The Dog.
When Ellie Mae died, the young man’s world went black. But today, in this ethereal place, Ellie was strong, fit, happy. No hip problems. No pain. No white hair around the muzzle. No pancreatitis.
So here they were. The young man and all his dogs.
He was lying there on the heavenly floor, in the dirt, getting lovingly mauled by canines. Rolling around. Laughing. Smiling. Playing. Running. Shouting.
Funny. He’d always thought heaven was a place where people sang Gloria Gaither hit singles and wore bleached underpants. But heaven was so much more.
Heaven was a place where, for all eternity, and still a thousand eternities to come, you could have dog hair on your long white robe.
They say there are no tears in heaven. But, oh, they lied.