Interplanetary
September 13, 2015

Brooklyn, NYC
September 13, 2015

Brooklyn, NYC
August 30, 2015

New York, NY
August 23, 2015

Sometimes the details make all the difference.
Include art everywhere, in everything you do.
New York, NY
August 15, 2015

The backside of the Flatiron Building.
New York, NY
July 3, 2015

Union Square, NYC
February 2, 2015
This is a post I’ve dreaded writing for some time. And in some ways, it’s a post I’ve been writing in my head for a long time. As with all endings in life, it is a also a beginning though this does not make the ending any easier or provide any solace.
After eight years, our friend, guardian, teacher and bhuanchara, Archie passed away. He died peacefully with us by his side after a long illness.
It’s been a year since Archie’s passing and my wife and I still miss him terribly. His loss revealed as much about us as it did about him and his role in our lives. Some people have animals. Some animals are pets. We, and Archie, were neither of those. We were not owners. He was not a pet. To say otherwise would be to demean us all. Those who had to good fortune to meet him know that this is not a boastful nor sentimental statement.
At times in one’s life, it may happen that you linger on the idea of death and as you watch the ones you love confront their own mortality, the idea of death can weight more prominently on your psyche. To know is one thing, but it doesn’t take away the shock nor the pain. At best, it can only help to reinforce the love each day. When I say I’ve been writing this post for a long time, it is this lingering upon my psyche to which I’m referring. It is a dark thing to contemplate and my only comfort in those moments was the desire to somehow do Archie justice. To do it right. To explain it all. To make sense of it. To put feeling into words. And so here we go…
The lessons may seem simple. They may seem trite. I think they resonate and that the will stand the test of time, that they speak to a bigger truth, one which we may not always acknowledge in our lives.
For those who haven’t kept with us on our journey, here’s a list of Archie posts.
I started this blog to provide me an opportunity to write more and with Archie’s arrival into our lives, the timing was perfect. There I was with a new puppy who was as curious and adventurous as I was, out and about in the city. We enabled each other. I guess I’ve felt that posting without Archie snoring by my side would somehow be disrespectful. After all, this blog was also his voice in some ways. Our walks (and posts) were a reflection of both our perceptions. So without Archie’s input, this blog would seem half empty. We will have other dogs, but we will never have another Archie. I’ll still have this blog, but it won’t be the same blog.
I’m changing the name of this blog from “a man and his dog on whatever comes our way” to “walking my cigar.” It’s a nod to Gay Talese (as a writer, cigar smoker and as a dog owner) as well as his article of the same name. It’s an article I had an immediate affinity for after reading and as I walk around New York City today, it still echoes with a sense of nostalgia towards a more tolerant (and glamorous) city.
I’ve heard it said that dogs are a reflection of their owners — that how they behave is based on how they were raised — but I’ve never been comfortable with that concept when it came to Archie. I will always know that we learned more from him than he learned from us, that I could never honestly take credit for his behavior and that he was somehow innately gifted with tolerance, calmness, joy and patience. And for that, I am grateful. Thanks buddy.
November 17, 2013

Roosevelt, Long Island, NY