Search Chandra's Blog
Blog Tags
"Apparition" "Art of Spiritual Warfare" "Best in Show" "Body of a Girl" "Exposure" "Gone with the Wind" "Half a Life" "Husband and Wife" "Myth of You and Me" "Open Your Heart with Gardens" "Stiltsville" "Substitute Me" "Temptation by Water" "The Bird Sisters" "The Book Thief" "The Guardian Angel Diary" "The Heroine's Bookshelf" "The King's Speech" "The Language of Light" "The Love Goddess' Cooking School" "The Mobuis Striptease" "The Peach Keeper" "The Provence Cure for the Brokenhearted" "The Wednesday Sitsters" "This House" "Unintended" 50th Book Club Prize Pack act 'as if' Adam Levine adoption adventure advice Alpha Male Ann Hood Anna Cole Atlanta attachment parenting autism babies babywearing bad reviews bats beach house believer Ben Bethany Hamilton Betty Smith Big Nate birthdays biting Blizzards blog hopping blog tour blogging blogswap blurb body image book book clubs book tour Books and Books Boudreaux boys breastfeeding Bridget Asher brothers Buffalo News Caeli Widger cake California cancer caramel oat bars Caribbean Carol Shields Carolyn Haley cats Cayman Cayman Compass Ceausescu chameleon Charles Bukwosi Cherry Cheryl Chick Lit Plus childhood CHOP CHOSEN Christina Shideler Christmas Christmas cards chuffy Cinderella clothes coconut water color Colorado comedy community connected contests cooking co-sleeping cow milking craft criticism Crown Publishers cry it out Dakota Darin Strauss David Lipsky dawn Dawn Chorus Daybreak 27 Destined to Fail Diana Abu Jaber Diane Lockward DOG BLOG Dog Whisperer dogs Dr. Anna Leahy Dr. Karen Monroy Dr. Oz Due Uve editing editor education eggs Emily Kennedy Erin Blakemore evening walk expeditionary learning Exposure Facebook fake it til your make it Falcor family fan mail fans favorite books feminism Fon Wang Forrest Free stuff friends friendship gardening geography gluten-free goats God Grand Family Grant Schnarr grey hoodie guest blog Gyllian Davis Hannah Shelton Harper HarperCollins Hayden HHarperCollins hockey home homeschooling homework Hondiuras Honduras Huffington Post Huffington Post divorce editor ice hockey Ilie Ruby inspiration International Women's Day iPhone island living 'It Takes a Village' Ivan Jungé J Jane Austen jasmine tea Jeffrey Eugenides Jenna Blum Jessica Keenan Smith Jessie Jonah journals Judy Blume Julianna Baggott Kelly Simmons Kid History kids Kristin Kimball Labrador Laos Leah Stewart least favorite word letting go Lincoln Pierce Linda Davis Linden Lisa Belkin Lisa McKay literary agent live in the now Lois Alter Mark Lori Odhner Lori Tharps Lost Boy love language love story Lucky jeans Maggie Nelson magic Maria Massie marriage Martha Beck Max Maya Ziv meat Meg Waite Clayton Melissa McNallan Melissa Senate memoir menagerie mentor Michelle McGee micro fiction mindfulness miracle Miranda July modern living mojitos momstinct money MoxieMomma nachos NAIBA New Year Newfoundland Newfoundlands Nichole Bernier NRA Nutella NYTimes NYTimes Motherlode ocean Opening Heavens Doors orphanage paint Paleo Comfort Foods parenting patience persistence Perthes Disease Peter Pan Piper pizza poetry ponies Portland Psychology Today publication publishing puppy puppy breath puppydom Pushcart Prize Q&A quilts Quinn readers reading Rebecca Gyllenhaal Rebecca Rasmussen Remy resolutions review reviews revision ritual romance writer Romania running Sally Kim Samantha March Samoyed Sampson sangria SCUBA secret confessions security senior project Sept 11 serendipity sewing sexting sexy SheKnows Book Club PIck of the Year SheWrites shopping short fiction SImon&Schuster simple life sister sister-cousin sisters slings smells snow songs Sophie space exploration Spain Spanish sshort fiction Starbucks stuttering stylesubstancesoul.com sunset Susanna Daniels Swedenborg swimming teens Thanksgiving the climbing tree The Four Ms. Bradwells" The Grain Exchange The Name Game Thelma Zirkelbach Therese Fowler THUMOS TIME magazine tingarita Tourettes tradition travel Twitter ugly dolls unschooling Utila wedding whale sharks white wine William Faulkner winter Wisconsin worry writing writing and parenthood YA Fiction yoga Zulu
Saturday
Jun022012

A funeral for Frederick

Yesterday we buried Frederick, the Senegal chameleon I wrote about in this blog. We did everything we could. On his last day I found myself using the blunt end of a chopstick to make a mash of live waxworms, water, liquid calcium and vitamins. Under the advisement of a professional chameleon breeder, I held his bony body in my warm hands and used my thumb to pry open his mouth, and force fed him drops of this mixture in a last ditch effort to save him. She warned me--this would either be the beginning of the beginning, or the stress of this procedure would facilitate the end. 

 

It's heartbreaking for a nurturer when what is necessary doesn't look anything like my idea of love.

 

Frederick perked up for a few minutes afterwards, and then curled up under the light on top of the plant. I watched his toothpick splinters of a ribcage expand dramatically, and then with a sigh, it was over. 

 

 

We buried him in the memorial garden for J's mother, underneath the big cherry tree. 

Hayden sobbed, "You were right, you were right." Because we had told him not to buy a chameleon, that they were too challenging for novice reptile keepers. And I hugged him and said I had never wanted to be right, that this was the moment I hadn't wanted to come for either of them. Inside, we turned off the lights in his tank. Hayden took down the chart of the fridge that represented the 42 jobs he had to do for us to earn all the extra things we bought for Frederick, the bargain reptile show chameleon--he had just completed it the day before Frederick took a turn for the worse. 

 

But though I was sad for them both and disappointed I hadn't been able to pull him through, inside, a part of me was glad Haybes was grieving. When Frederick first came to live with us, one of the things I said to J was, What if he dies and Hayden is devastated? followed just as quickly by, What if he dies and Hayden doesn't really care? 

 

Life goes on here at the Hoffstead. I was woken up this morning by an American toad the size of a small hamburger bun being thrust in my face as he peed on my pillow--LOOK WHAT WE FOUND ON THE PATIO MOM! I was dragged out of the shower to come see a huge snapping turtle who made her way onto our lawn in the midst of last night's rainstorm. As we walked her to the stream with a net, Hayden chattered about the tadpoles in our pond. And while the  boys and I released the snapping turtle and the toad and walked the dog, J got the phone call that his Papa Joe will come home from the hospital... with hospice care. I feel so grateful that they all had such a great weekend together over Memorial Day. 

 

Round and round it goes. 

 

 

 

 

References (4)

References allow you to track sources for this article, as well as articles that were written in response to this article.
  • Response
    Response: Added Input
    Based on my research, after a in foreclosure process home is offered at an auction, it is common with the borrower in order to still have a remaining unpaid debt on the mortgage loan. There are many lenders who make an effort to have all fees and liens paid off by ...
  • Response
    Response: Updated Focus
    I have noticed that car insurance companies know the cars which are liable to accidents and various risks. In addition, they know what style of cars are given to higher risk along with the higher risk they have the higher the actual premium charge. Understanding the very simple basics involving car ...
  • Response
    Response: Helpful Insight
    Utterly pent content , regards for information .
  • Response
    Response: Similar Opinions
    fantastic points altogether, you just gained a emblem new reader. What might you recommend in regards to your publish that you just made a few days in the past? Any positive?

Reader Comments (1)

Crying into my keyboard now. So frustrated by those pet/reptile expo shows. Went to one once and swore never again. Don't quite understand how supposed animal lovers participate in such shenanigans. The health of all the animals involved seems very much in doubt.

But the good that comes out of them, through the Lord's Divine Mercy, is evident in your blog post.

Thank you.

June 3, 2012 | Unregistered CommenterJess

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
Some HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>