I was fully prepared to be a
cat person for the rest of my life. Enter Beau, an Australian sheepherding dog
with a bladder control problem. Inherited from my then-husband’s ex-wife who
would euthanize him if we didn’t take him, Beau became my responsibility. I had
to get over my fear of dogs, and especially this one. Not so much that I
thought he would bite me, but that he peed everywhere when he got excited.
Which was pretty much his standard “hello,” when he saw you. That coupled with
his errant herding instinct of knocking me down when I was carrying groceries
into the house... well, we had some work to do. I had to look beyond my
resentment of the ex for forcing a dog into my life. I didn’t like dogs; coupled
with the drooling spit factor, they’re smelly and messy and take a lot of
attention. And I really didn’t like this one with the added pee factor. But I
was the primary caretaker, and so we had to make friends. Until Beau, I hadn’t
really had any consistent interaction with dogs. I was a cat person; they are
more convenient. They aren’t clammering for attention. They don’t drool. Where
dogs are saying, Pet-me-pet-me-pet-me,
cats are saying, Perhaps you may pet me.
If I feel like it. Maybe.
My husband used to play this
cute game with Beau; he would be sitting in front of him, and he would take his
finger and point it at him and say, “Bang!” And Beau would flop over on the
ground, playing dead.
My dear friend Miss Ruthie
groomed Beau and cleaned him up. She is my expert on children and animals. I
took him for a walk everyday, and fed and watered him. And somewhere along the
way, I actually began to love this guy. He was really a sweet dog. And around
the time that I realized that I wasn’t afraid of dogs anymore, and that I was
attached to this one . . . we went away for a weekend and a friend was coming
to the house to feed him and he got out of the house and disappeared. She never
made much of an effort to find him. Husband walked up the road toward a farm
and found that he had gotten hit by a car. Just like that, he was gone. It was
the oddest thing; I was petting him before we left and I felt him saying
goodbye to me. But not just goodbye for the weekend. I was assuring him that
we’d be back. And he was trying to tell me he wouldn’t be there when we got
back.
Beau came into my life and
helped to heal an old wound. He showed me the capacity for love of a dog. When
I got that lesson, his work was done.
~Excerpted from Healing Dogs with Love
Sorry for the lack of a photo of Beau--am working on it!
2 comments:
Hali.. like you say in your recent blogs about yourself, although I find this hard to believe, I have not been much of a dog person. I have an affection for most living things as long as they don't require too much of me, but I am loving your blogs. I am sure your book is going to be wonderful.
Haha--yes, I never would have thought I would be such a dog lover. Thanks for your kind words--high praise indeed from a published author! :-) H.
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