Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Into The Great Wide Open



Bela had fans and friends in Chicago - people who witnessed her jump work every day in the public parks. We walked both in the mornings and at night with the neighbors. It was an incredibly social time for two incredibly social gals.

Now she and I take walks, always alone, usually in Hickory Hill park, a giant wooded and trailed area just around the bend from our residence. Hickory Hill is bound by not a fence, but it's enormous enough to feel as if it's its own sector of the world. You feel somehow safe and protected by its vastness.

Bela and I have now logged a little bit of (life)time together. This summer, I was able to leash-lessly lead her both to and fro our playing spot in Kentucky. She didn't scat once. So I thought we were picking up where we left off. Old-new habits die hard. "Here you go, sugar," I've said, countless times, leaning down to allow her a leashless trot. And so...she's been returned to the house by a neighbor. Flushed out of the woods by a team of cross country runners. Carried back to me by a group of young boys sledding. Apprehended by Julia, the 11-year neighborhood sage.

The first time I took her to Nic's parents house, we put her in the giant fenced-in back yard. A short while later, Nic saw a deer running behind the house. I, too, saw a deer running behind the house! Then we both realized it was a wee bit small for a deer. She'd broken free of the fence. Nic also has a fenced in yard, yet she's taken to the streets of his little town twice. She had previously remained in the UN-fenced backyard where we live without problem. But around the same time that her speedings-off picked up speed, she also began sprinting from the yard. If I so much as glanced away, she was gone. If I released the leash 2 footsteps in front of the door instead of in the doorway -- outta there. She had claimed the world for herself.

Releasing her in Hickory Hill has proven a growth opportunity. Within seconds, she's off  -- out of sight and then back in, over and over again, darting through the trees. I used to run in the direction she'd gone, yelling her name in a blood-curdling fashion. My legs would shake, my heart would quake, as a I waited what seemed an eternity. Now, I breathe in. I wink at the landscape. I twirl. Time doesn't stand still...it naturally ebbs and flows, as I wait for my sweet dog to come back.


After all of the panic and all of the fear, she has proven herself trustworthy. I can trust her to take off nearly 100% of the time she's not on a leash, but I can also trust her to return. The return on this gamble is quite literally her return. I take sausage and liver with me because she is not Hachiko. I say silent prayers each time I am surrounded by silence -- that is, the absence of the sound of her paws. 'Dear Lord, please bring her safely back to me. At which time I will reward her, kiss her head and then release her once again.'

I know there is a chance one day she'll run outside of the park limits and too close to the street. But chance can't chain her to my side. The woods are her new home and they welcome her. She is contained only by their inability to contain her.





                                    (she is the tiny brown dot with shadow in the middle)















Wednesday, October 9, 2013

DOG THAT I AM: guest post by amy iddings


I’m okay with admitting I’ve been kinda hard on dogs and their people most of my life. Probably kinda like a lot of folks are kinda hard on cat people. Despite being (generally) genuinely filled with love for all living animals, including the human ones, more often than not, dogs-as-people’s-pets have gotten on my damn nerves. When I lived in Chile, I was a huge fan of the perros callejeros (street dogs)-- loved their camaraderie, their pack-ness, their rugged self-reliance, their dreadlocks, their cunning. They seemed content in their own right, focused on survival and brotherhood. These guys were cool! They were not annoying at all! I also loved frequently seeing some tired and dirty laborer come out of a butcher shop with a bag of bones, to leave them gingerly near a pack of streetworn perros, or an old lady gift a wet and shivering street dog with a multicolored handknit winter wool sweater vest.

But indoor pet dogs in the U.S.A?  I’ve seen them as needy, insecure, often obnoxious to my ears and nose, and generally a tedious aberration of a ‘natural animal.’ Their owners I have judged as being needy, insecure, often obnoxious, (and, ha!, possibly even tedious aberrations of natural animals). I’ve looked scathingly at city-dog-people with their perfect pooches, the modern-day bourgeois standard. How undignified!-- to stick one’s hand, inside-out into a plastic bag to pick up dog poo from other people’s yards, and not just for the owner!; for the dog, for the onlooker, for society as a whole! Like seriously, my thinking has gone, How have we done this, created these totally fragile, dependent, frequently adorable, though occasionally vicious little beasts who can’t be left alone, who we can’t accidentally forget to let be around one of the incredibly common 60-or-so Fatally Freaking Poisonous Foods to Dogs, whose feet and fur and teeth we have to protect from nature, who apparently need every manner of expensive purchased item in order for us to feel proud of ourselves for taking good care of a creature who we just want around to help us feel special?? What have we done?*

Sometimes when I’ve identified myself as “not a dog person” to a dog person, they counter by asking if I am a cat person. I resent that line of questioning because it seems way too simple and, to my judgmental mind, lets the Dog Person off the hook: Oh, she’s a neurotic cat lady so of course she can’t possibly understand the obvious superiority of dogs. I try not to go there, but sometimes I do say that I prefer cats but that I don’t, you know, like have a cat. Or I’ll quote my all-animal-loving friend Justine and say as aloofly and felinely as possible “Cats just know who they are.” Now if we’ve gotten this far in the tiresome Dog vs. Cat Debate, there is around an 85% chance I will get served my most/least favorite Dogs Over Cats argument: “They love you no matter what and every time I walk through the door, it’s like the most exciting thing that’s ever happened to {dog’s name here}!!” Which, to me, has always been like, yeah, dude--exactly, case-in-point. Because apparently I’ve seen that as a weakness, the need for this blind unconditional love creature that treats one’s arrival home as the most exciting thing to have ever happened ever. It’s felt hollow to me, like seriously what the hell happened to you that you need this element in  your life? Can’t you just come in and make yourself some tea? (Uhh, like I said, I’ve been kind of hard on dog people).

So living this summer not just with A Dog Person, but quite possibly The Most Dog Person anyone might ever run into, and her dog, really challenged me in some core ways. The fact that Kelly is also my oldest (as in longevity of friendship) best friend, who I love incredibly dearly, and that her dog is a Very Cool Dog (almost cat-like, could I say?) made the situation: a) at all possible; b) motivating for a new perspective and c) still pretty challenging.

They arrived in the middle of the night on June 1. I had worked a long catering event (involving a power outage in the middle of a 300-guest college basketball coach wedding, and a coworker getting trapped in an elevator for around an hour) and simply could not keep my eyes open any longer. I fell asleep in soft anticipation of The Summer Experiment (living with my BFF for the first time, her living in Kentucky and not working, me living with a dog). Not too worried about Bela’s arrival. I had shared a bed with Bela for a night in Chicago in January and determined she does not a) bark or b) smell bad. And Kelly assured me she would not be all up in my personal space all the time, “cause she just doesn’t care.” So around 1 a.m., I awoke and found a text on my phone, from Kel: Ames, you got a garden hose? Bela rolled in some shiiit today.

Oh. They arrived soon thereafter and so there we were at 2 a.m. using my neighbor’s garden hose and some Dr. Bronner’s to get the shiiit off Bela before she moved into my rather smallish apartment for 3 months. We settled down around 3:00, tired but happy to be together. A little after 4, we were awakened violently by Bela’s barking sharply out the window facing downtown Murray. Must have seen some country wildlife she was interested in. (Yep, living a block from downtown, I have seen possums, raccoon families, and even a red fox strolling down my street). After being awakened by the barking, and the subsequent fear my neighbors/landlords would have been awakened and resent me, and also that the barking would be a constant companion all summer and I would resent everything, I had to pee. The bathroom smelled strongly of wet dog. There were a lot of wet-dog-smelling hairs around, sticking to the floor, the wall, the sink. So I’m sitting there kind of doing a mental review… Barking: Check. Bad dog smells: Check. And then: the third Dreaded Dog Factor: Bela nuzzles open the bathroom door and bounds right in to spend some time with me while I urinate. Did I mention I’ve lived alone for the last 5 years? During which time all the sounds, smells and company in my home has been completely and thoroughly related to my own biology, habits, desires and sense of control? Yikes.
 
Psychology Today has pointed out recently that in an online survey of over 4,500 people, those who self-identified as dog people were more “extroverted, agreeable, and conscientious” compared with cat people who were “more open to experience and more neurotic” than dog people. Damn. Again with the neurotic.

My quick-and-dirty dabble into dog ownership this summer has brought a lot out of my subconscious. For example, I now remember saying to my mom when I was around 13, and really discovering for the first time the ways humans could mess with each other’s minds, that I “wished we all just had tails like dogs and get it over with”, that way I could actually know if someone genuinely liked me or just liked messing with my mind. I recognized then, I guess, that with dogs, it’s all right there. Really freaking happy to see you? Ok, you’re definitely gonna know about that. Dog-tired? Not gonna pretend he’s anything but. Just attacked an entire loaf of bread you were planning on making the perfect French toast out of? It’s written all over her face. It reminds me of one of the themes from the book Mutant Message Down Under, about the Australian aborigines, who have no problem hearing other’s thoughts (communicating telepathically) because they have no intention to deceive. So what the hell is up with my idolatry of the cat’s mysterious ways? Is it because I’ve always wanted to be more reserved than I have ever been able to muster? I’ve had enough training to realize that usually what we feel strongly compelled to hate in another is just an outward representation of some part of ourselves we haven’t yet brought to light and accepted. Yikes again. Life this summer with Bela certainly showed me some parts of myself I hadn’t cared to look at. Like really, truly, what was it about the simple love of dogs that got under my skin, that seemed false or weak or unworthy? Why did their devotion make me squirm? What was it about the open-book-ness of dogs that I couldn’t stand? Have I recognized myself in the spirit of the dog, and therefore felt critical, almost (ugh) neurotically so?

Looking at my own way of interacting with those I care about (particularly through the lens of the mutual therapy Kelly and I did on ourselves practically every summer night over some combination of wine, beer, popcorn, pizza and this killer salad we made up), I have been shocked to realize I have quite a bit of the dog spirit in me—like cannot, try as I might, keep hidden from people my love/appreciation/admiration of them. My tail wags wildly. Sometimes it gets me into sticky situations. But I just keep doing it. Putting it all out there.

Living with my best friend and her best dog this summer was a lot like a functional, happy family. We teamed it. Make no mistake: Kelly is the very best dogmom I can ever imagine. (Sometimes even neurotically so! J) But Bela won me over, no doubt about it. The three of us worked out a color coded tab system on her collar so Kelly would know each morning if I’d had time to take her out before leaving for work. We all made decisions together. Balanced each other out a bit. Kelly won’t cuddle with me (though she is warming up to hugs), but she and Bela do this freely. Bela and I
developed a special ball technique with my feet and her nose that is ours alone. I loved throwing sticks and balls with Kelly and Bela in an empty lot near my house, and I loved throwing sticks and balls with just Bela when Kelly went out of town a few weekends. I didn’t let Bela sleep in my bed but I did give her licks of ice cream off my spoon. I even let her lick my face! I nuzzled my face in her sweet, dog-smelling fur! And they both (after Bela’s first night) were incredibly graceful with respecting my personal space. I was able to give and receive love from an exemplar of a species I have judged. I observed Kelly (who is possibly more cat-like in her interactions with people) get good practice at open-book-ness in the safe, loving arms of her dog.

And I’ve noticed that I look at dogs way differently now. Like, I literally look at them differently; my eyes move differently across the landscape when a dog enters it. I notice a dog’s carriage (and know to call it that, cause Kelly taught me), its tail movement, whether it likes eye contact or no, the relationship it seems to have with its person. I don’t think I’ll ever be “into dogs” the way Kelly is into dogs. I don’t think she’ll ever wait on the phone for me as I greet each and every canine I come into contact with, in the most personal, energetic, and loving way. I don’t think I’ll ever adopt a dog into my home permanently. But if Kelly moved to Italy for a season, I’d consider Bela as a roommate. And my level of judgment towards dogs and dog people has gotten a serious beat-down. It isn’t gone completely, but I’m onto it. I know it’s a lot more about me than it is them.

 

*Thank you, Dog People, for helping take care of the millions of dogs we have created to be dependent upon our care.    Thank God I’m enough of a cat person and “open to new experiences” to take all this in. I am grateful for things learned. Thank you, Kel. Thank you, Bela.

 

 

 

 

 

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Castaway

Sometimes, I think of getting rid of Bela.

You read that right, and I know that 'it's wrong'...but... sometimes I think of getting rid of her. I have nowhere to send her, no one to ship her off to and no plan in place, but it does cross my mind.

When I want to stay out all night and not worry about how many hours have passed since I left, I think about it. When I want to take a weekend trip and I have to ask friends - or strangers - to help, I think of it. When a friend asks if I want to live with her in Italy, I think of it. (Alot alot alot.)

In this time of transition and change, from one state line to the next, I have thought about it more than usual. I haven't provided her a white-picket fence, two-story home with a dog entrance. She's yet to have a yard of her own. I've given her little more than a small apartment and park trips.

I've been trying to map the course of my life. My life has been but a dance of longing. I love to land; I love to leave. I like to enter and exit other's lives, my own intricate weave.

I tend to believe things happen *for a reason*, so I question Bela's permanent place in my life. Maybe it's so that I could grasp the concept of solidity; of a constant anchor of sorts. I don't really feel like I have a home, I suppose - a place where I belong. Maybe it was because I needed to learn to ask for help. Because I fucking hate to ask for help. I am obsessed with being self-sufficient, not needing anyone for anything. But I have been forced to ask favors left and right, and sometimes straight-up beg someone to help me out...(because her bladder has a timeline and it doesn't always line up with mine.)

Last month in a thrift store, I plunked down money I likely shouldn't have for 2 vintage hats. Waiting for the native Swiss shopowner to process the payment, I noticed 2 small gray poodles. A 'toy' and a 'teacup' - 3 and 7 pounds. They were in a bag below the register. There isn't anywhere the woman can't go with bagdogs -- they're allowed to fly, shop and even eat in restaurants, as long as their extremities remain inside the sack. I sat back, thinking how easy her life must be with these little rats. Then she mentioned she had 5 dogs in total (and some cats), her favorite being a German Shepherd. She verbally drew me a family tree, when they'd come along and then departed this world. I drew a breath in, and stammered out a "Wow". She could probably hear me thinking about the work, the money, the house! And so she responded to my thought -- by throwing her chin way up in the air -- and then -- (as if she could see inside my fickle soul) -- stated to the universe:

"AND I KEEP THEM TIL THEY DIE!!

I'M NOT ONE OF THOSE PEOPLE THAT GET RID OF PETS!!

[she paused for effect]

NOOOOO.  WAYYY!!!!!"




Footnote:
I have often compared my dog to a [human] child, and countered a friend's child-centered story with one about her. Sometimes it just doesn't seem like an entirely different ballgame... But I'm going to use this moment here to really step back and admit -- well , yes -- yes of course -- I know that it is. Because while you, parents, never ever think about 'getting rid' of your kids -- I think about getting rid of Bela. I don't intend to and don't want to. BUT -- IF ANYONE -- AND I MEAN ANYONE -- wants to watch her so that I can live abroad for a short time, please let me know. :)

Sunday, July 7, 2013

What's Montague?

Bela is not my dog.

She's a dog. One that, as of 9:09 pm on July 7, 2013, I have the honor of taking care of.

The labeling game has taken us too far, confused us and convinced us too much. Made us blind to bigger truths. Our labels make 'sense' and make us feel 'safe' -- but they're just that -- labels. They don't have any meaning but the meaning we give them.

I could wax on all day long about Bela being mine and mine and oh-so-mine...
But present-day scenery shakes me, as I'm a mere 10 minutes from the state line of Bela's former home. Bela was shipped in van with god-knows-how-many-other country dogs a couple of years back. Tennessee to Chicago was their route. Greener pastures, in the poetic sense of the phrase. (And really...likely not for all of them. Some may have accidentally plucked themselves from a really sweet situation by running off and not finding their way back before apprehension.)

She has transitioned, from one human host to another. So she's this amazing just-shy of 40 lbs. brown supposed-lab mix that was once shipped from TN to IL. I don't know more than that. I don't know who taught her to sit and put out her paw. (They may still refer to her as 'their' dog. ) I don't know what she looked like as a baby and if she had brothers or sisters. She's her ma's dog, for sure. That's the only soul that can really lay claim to her.

A few months ago, my niece Olivia's cat named for her favorite food ("Butter") ran off. We spent many teary nights trying to make her accept/be cool with the situation. We urged her to consider that death was not the most likely scenario; that Butter was likely hanging out with another family somewhere, probably not even terribly far away. To try to imagine her shrouded in love. To allllllmost.....be happy for her. (There are middle-aged adults that aren't capable of this. We tried to convince a 7-yr old to see the beauty in letting her dove go. And you know what? Though the tears streamed, I have the feeling that as a child, she was much more capable -- of freeing Butter from the chains of her love.)

I've been struggling with anxiety lately. The kind that, well, to be honest, makes it hard to breathe.  Talking to my mom the other night, she threw out a little wisdom pearl. She suggested I try to do more like dogs and children. Live in the moment. They don't dwell in the past or think about the future. Don't have the attention span for such undertakings....tending to eradicate anxieties of the adult kind.

She's right. I don't need  to have such a deathgrip on all things. What I think will happen vs. what I hope will. I have today. Today, Bela is in my care, so I'll take care of her. I'll walk her, feed her, and take her to the park. I don't know shiiiit about tomorrow. She may be here, I may be there, or she and I may both be elsewhere.

I took a solo trip to DQ a few days after my arrival here in Murray. I bought a small vanilla cone. The teenage boy in front of me bought an even smaller vanilla cone. It was so small, in fact, that I had to ask about it. "What is that you got?", I inquired. "It's a baby cone", he replied, and then headed to his black SUV. When I walked past his vehicle on my way to a bench, I saw a tiny face peeking out of the back seat, gently licking the baby cone. I had to get closer. The image was delightful. It was a dachshund, sized like the cone, coyly working on its treat. "Oh, HOW cute!", I squealed! His country drawl came back. "Yeah. She's our new dog. I mean, she's not a new dog but she's new-to-us. She just came to us. And we feel so blessed that she came." And then, "She's a puppy. And her name is Lucy."
"Happiness to you and Lucy," I said, planting a pat on her little head.

I sat near the wooded area in the back and slowly consumed my cone. About 20 minutes later, an older man in a golf cart came speeding into the parking lot and approached a table, hurriedly asking something of them. He had started to speed off when I overhead a customer saying, "No, we haven't seen no dog."

My eyes and my heart fluttered. I clasped my hand to my chest and ran after the man, saying, "Sir!!?? Were you talking about a dog??"

"I'm looking for my little brown dog. She's a dachshund and her name is Hazel and she's just run off and......" His voice trailed, in angst, knowing that the longer the explanation time, the less time on the search.   Oh God. Oh God, I thought. Oh my god. The dachshund named Hazel, that belong[s/ed] to this man, now operates under the alias of Lucy and just ate a cone in the back of a black SUV and is being referred to as a teenager's 'new puppy'.   oh      god.

I tried to explain to him the scene I'd come upon moments earlier, and to relay that I think I'd seen her and that she was with a young boy and that he called her 'Lucy'...................... in angst, this too....

He listened, he did. But then he reared his head back and SPAT OUT AT ME, "MY DAWG'S NAME IS HAZEL!!!"

Then he sped off on his golf cart.

Two days later, I was walking 'my' dog when I saw the gentleman cruise by in his golf cart again, combing the streets. Eyes focused, body upright, tuning out irrelevant sights and sounds, in the quest for his Hazel.

Later, I wondered,
with his loss so lucid and drive so very focused
that
if he were to cruise right past Lucy,
if he would even know it was Hazel.

But then again, Hazel may just now BE Lucy. And would he want to rob her of that chance? To be a puppy again?



"The way to love anything is to realize that it may be lost."
G.K. Chesterton




*(this post has been in the works for WEEKS now. as you can see from the timestamp I inserted in it above, I sat down to it at 9:09pm this night.

at 9:36pm, my sister called.             Butter has been FOUND.)

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

A Southern Sabbatical

On the 3rd anniversary of Bela's adoption date, we packed up the car and headed to Kentucky for a summer stay. We packed patience and sunhats. We have eyes wide open and an appetite for all things country. She has settled in quite nicely. The porch is her perch; she sits and/or sleeps up there all the day long....

We're eating fine, too. There are eggs from a friend's chicken. Honey from my roomate's parent's bees, fresh-from-the-garden sugar snap peas, and just-picked mint for our water. (And homemade moonshine in the fridge, but I'm going to do my best to avoid that.      For.....now.)

On our first evening here, we walked to the 60-year old Dairy Queen. As we passed a family sitting on the white bench out front, the mother looked at Bela wistfully and said, "Swayt little dawg." Swayt. As in 'sweet' but with a serious southern accent. This morning, an older gentleman stopped in the middle of the road to roll down his van window and tell me "I lock your dawg." Again, 'like' but with a southern touch.

We're just over 72 hours in and I, too, appear to be altering my speech. While exiting a store today, I struggled with the door. The shop owner gave me a gentle nudge. "You have to push it, dear," she said. "Oh.........I was pollin'", I replied. Yes.... 'Pulling' but with a twang.

It seems right. There is a husband of a friend of mine that could have just sworn that my last name was Grain. She and I were simply baffled how he would arrived at that conclusion until he explained that that was exactly how I pronounced it: 'Green', you know -- as in, "Grain."