Close Menu
  • Home
    • About
    • Masthead
    • Links
  • MER Journal
    • Latest Issue
    • Back Issues
    • Subscribe to MER!
  • MER ONLINE
    • MER Quarterly
    • MER Literary Folios
    • Poetry
    • Fiction
    • Creative Prose
    • Essay
    • Craft
    • Interviews
    • Book Reviews
      • Bookshelf
    • Authors’ Notes
    • Art Gallery
      • Special – Hybrids
  • News & Events
    • News
    • Poem of the Month
    • Events
      • MER 18 Virtual Reading – Voices From HOME
    • Currents
      • Announcements
      • Highlights
  • Shop
    • All Issues
    • One Year Subscription
    • Two Year Subscription
  • Submit
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
MER – Mom Egg Review
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube Tumblr Threads
  • Home
    • About
    • Masthead
    • Links
  • MER Journal
    • Latest Issue
    • Back Issues
    • Subscribe to MER!
  • MER ONLINE
    • MER Quarterly
    • MER Literary Folios
    • Poetry
    • Fiction
    • Creative Prose
    • Essay
    • Craft
    • Interviews
    • Book Reviews
      • Bookshelf
    • Authors’ Notes
    • Art Gallery
      • Special – Hybrids
  • News & Events
    • News
    • Poem of the Month
    • Events
      • MER 18 Virtual Reading – Voices From HOME
    • Currents
      • Announcements
      • Highlights
  • Shop
    • All Issues
    • One Year Subscription
    • Two Year Subscription
  • Submit
NEWSLETTER
MER – Mom Egg Review
You are at:Home » Jessica Feder-Birnbaum – Creative Prose

Jessica Feder-Birnbaum – Creative Prose

0
By Mom Egg Review on February 13, 2019 Prose

Jessica Feder-Birnbaum

Just A Dog

The dog is picky with food. His glands are swollen.
Blood work shows Canine Lymphoma.
Chemotherapy offers a shot at remission.
There is rarely a cure.
The kids say you favor the dog. Not your idea to get the dog.
Now you must save the dog.
You thought you were being frugal by adopting a rescue.
Fat chance. First there were the puppy warts.
Next was the hip dysplasia. And now the dog has cancer.
A cycle of chemo costs as much as sending the kids to sleep away camp.
The same as a month of round the clock nurse-aides for your mother-in-law.
But the dog responds to treatment.
You are cautiously optimistic and pray for a cure.
At the end of six months the dog is declared to be in remission.
He wears a royal blue bandana that says “kicking cancer’s tail.”
The dog is back to himself. The lymphoma, it seems is a thing of the past.
Then one day you notice the dog is picky with food. His glands are swollen.
Blood work shows the lymphoma is back.
The dog’s life flashes before your eyes: His first haircut.
Chasing the cat around the apartment.
Walking on Park Avenue with his butt in the air.
The vet oncologist tells of a Labrador who’s thirteen and on a third round of chemo.
There are still unpaid balances on your credit card.
The vet puts the dog on prednisone.
It’s less expensive, and less effective than chemo.
A side effect is polydipsia, which is increased thirst and urination.
The dog gets more walks. Wee-wee pads blanket the floor.
The dog receives acupuncture.
Holistic supplements called Survival and Immune Support are stirred into his food.
You’re up all night worrying about the dog.
You’re not ready to give up on the dog.
The dog is like your third child.
He doesn’t know he’s sick
He’s just a dog.


Jessica Feder-Birnbaum is a playwright, author, and interdisciplinary theatre artist. Her plays are produced regionally and in New York. Other writings have been published in print and on-line.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleKathy Kurz – Creative Prose
Next Article Katie Manning – Poetry

Comments are closed.

November 13, 2025

Author Spotlight – Allison Blevins

November 13, 2025

At the Redemption Center by Anne Sandor

November 13, 2025

Son of A Bird by Nin Andrews

November 13, 2025

Exile is Not a Foreign Word  by Pramila Venkateswaran

November 13, 2025

MER Bookshelf – November 2025

November 13, 2025

MER Pushcart Prize Nominations

November 3, 2025

Count On Me By Ann Cavlovic

November 1, 2025

Art Submissions Open Until 12/1/25

November 1, 2025

MER Poem of the Month – November 2025

October 14, 2025

Author’s Note: Marjorie Maddox on Seeing Things

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube Tumblr Threads
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Submit
  • Contact
MER - Mom Egg Review
PO Box 9037, Bardonia, NY 10954
Contact [email protected]

Copyright © 2025 MER and Mom Egg Review

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.