Our 15 year old, 15 pound cockapoo is deaf, partially blind, very weak in the hind legs, and demented--she doesn't seem to know what she wants, what she came into a room for, etc. (Like me) Pisses in the house about once a day, but we keep a pretty close eye on her and take her out periodically. She doesn't seem to be in any pain. We have to carry her up stairs or to put her on the bed. Sometimes she falls off things. As I posted in another thread she fell down a flight of hard wood stairs from the top--halfway down she landed on her feet running and made it to the bottom without missing a step, moving her feet faster than I'd ever seen her.
So physically there's no reason to euthanize her. I just wonder how the combination of sensory loss and dementia feels to her. I could see her accepting it the way dogs seem to accept everything that happens to them and not being in any mental distress. Or I could see the situation being very distressing for her. Who knows what's in a dog's mind. The only thing that bothers her is being left alone. When I come home after being gone a while I find her standing in the living room looking towards the front door and softly crying. (She used to be a very vocal dog--barking at strangers and other dogs, howling when she wanted something, growling when her water dish was empty. She's stopped doing all that--there's just the crying.) When we are home she sticks to us like glue.
I guess we'll just keep rubbing her cheeks and ears, letting her clean our plates, giving her treats, and keep giving her the canned food we just switched her to, which she appreciates.
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