Pinkie

It seemed like a story you’d read in a Beverly Cleary novel or The Reader’s Digest… and yet it was such a Meneses thing to happen.

On our way back home from dropping off one of my kid’s friends, coming through a residential neighborhood, I was just doing my due diligence when I stopped for a lost dog. A slender yellow lab/retriever mix, I knew she was lost when I watched her wander from yard to yard looking for food scraps around the trash cans. Yet a red collar and black shock collar side by side told me she surely had a home. She was thin but not too too thin and had a nice coat, she couldn’t have been out for too long.

She let me come right up to her to check for tags. I expected this encounter to end like all the other times I stopped for dogs- check the tags, call the owner, stand on the street holding lost dog til owner comes to retrieve. A simple courtesy from one dog owner to the next, the same courtesy that had been done for me when my beagle hound mix “Emma” took off to adventure. But this pup didn’t have any tags. No sharpie phone number on the collar either.

As I stood there trying to determine my next move, she jumped into the open door of my mini van. “Well okay then.” My then 9 and 12 year olds were of course all the wiggles with excitement- “Are we gonna keep her?”

“No, no, no…” I assured them… “She clearly belongs to someone… we just need to find her owner.”

“What are we going to tell Daddy?”

“You guys let me handle that… In fact, when we get home, why don’t you guys just hang in the car for a minute with the dog?… I’ll go inside and talk to Daddy first.”

And so the conversation started with “Hey babe, how was work?” And ended with, “It will only be a few hours… 3 days tops. She’ll be gone by Wednesday. This dog has an owner… I just need to find it.” And though I vowed to keep her outside, not knowing what ailments she might carry and not wanting to expose her to our healthy dog, cat and rabbit inside… within an hour, that street dog had scratched the back door enough to work her way in the house… and on my bed.

For a solid month we contacted every dog rescue site, posted on every social media outlet, took her to local vets to get scanned and hopefully ID’d, even walked the neighborhood we found her in to ask the locals if they knew who she belonged to, telling the young dog “Take me home baby…” all to no avail. In that process, we learned that the neighborhood we found her in was a popular spot to dump dogs- right on the county/city line. And the dog that appeared to be so well taken care of, perhaps wasn’t quite so. Besides being a bit underweight, she wasn’t spayed, had a build up of scar tissue in her ears from chronic ear infections as a puppy, and a bb embedded in her shoulder from being shot. One of her breasts had a mass in it- about the size of a ping pong ball and the vet surmised that it “didn’t look good.” Perhaps it was that tumor that was the reason for her being dumped?

Nonetheless, it would be a costly procedure to remove the mass and the pathology may reveal a poor prognosis for the dog we’d only just begun to know. A procedure, no shelter would likely invest in. With local shelters already over capacity, we knew this adult dog, found on the streets of Baltimore, wouldn’t stand a chance in the shelters. And despite the fact that we never planned to have a second dog and my begrudged husband was still quoting me… “No more than 3 days… you said”, neither of us were willing to send her to a probable death. Under the guidance of our vet, we decided to get to know this dog a little better before we made any big decisions.

During the first few weeks we had her, we noticed she had an unusual trait- a pink nose, instead of black. One day while I was home alone, I thought to myself, “‘Pinkie’ would be a good name for her, if she stayed.” That same afternoon, my husband came home and casually said ” You know I was thinking… ‘Pinkie’ would be a good name for her…. not that we’re keeping her though. We’re not keeping her!” And then he asked if I’d gotten any responses to my posts, had any luck finding her a home. And he shook his head and walked away. I knew then, that the universe had spoken. Now just to win over my husband.

City law stated that after 30 days of a lost dog being in your possession, you assumed ownership of that dog. That February, “Pinkie” became ours.

But her story had only just begun.

It seemed our first 30 days was a bit of a honeymoon. While she got along beautifully with the cat and rabbit, a welcome change from our prey-driven hound who took great efforts to teach not to eat the small family pets, Pinkie asserted herself elsewhere and declared herself alpha over our 7 year old dog Emma. And it was hard to watch and tolerate. Emma, who had always slept on the floor next to my side of the bed, was suddenly being cast out of the bedroom- tail between her legs and head down, with a single glance from Pinkie. Pinkie ate first. Pinkie was calling the shots. And though we tried initially to intervene and to empower our OG Emma…. we soon realized this process was not ours to control. Emma had submitted.

And with this power gain, Pinkie started to assert her dominance over us people folk too. While on the ground- she behaved well. But she had become quite comfortable on our beds ( a privilege Emma had always been denied) and in that position she would declare herself the dictator. If any one of us humans, approached the bed she was lying on, she would snarl and snap. She did it to me when I approached my daughter’s bed, while she and Pinkie snuggled. And she did it to my husband when he approached our bed and Pinkie lie with me post night shift. That moment was a memorable one in our marriage. My docile husband shot me eyes that could kill, pointed at the dog and said “Fix your dog!” I thought for sure I was about to be sleeping in a tent in the back yard. We still joke, all these years later, that that dog almost ended our marriage.

It wasn’t just in our house that she tried to take control, either. On walks, she tried to bite the head off of every dog she encountered. It was like she was trying to prove something, like her loss of control turned into a desperate attempt to regain control in a quite unsavory way. Perhaps she had been fighting for longer than we first realized.

I turned to my beloved vet for guidance. “If you don’t fix this”, she said, “she’s gonna get put down. No shelter, no home, will tolerate this type of behavior. You got to regain dominance.” “No more beds”, she said. She explained that the elevated position, brings them closer to our eye level, and for some dogs, gives them an unhealthy sense of power. “Make her work for everything”- “Don’t pet her, don’t feed her, until she works for it. Give her commands, then reward her when she follows them.”

To make matters worse, when we took her to the local city clinic to be spayed- she had a horrific hormonal reaction (either a fantom pregnancy or a real one that was ended when they spayed her). The night after her surgery, her breasts filled with milk and dripped all over the floors. She began collecting the cat’s toys under our bed- treating it as her den and them as her babies, becoming aggressive if we reached under the bed. The clinic that we used was a public service- perfect for us as we weren’t financially prepared to take on a second dog. Fifty bucks to spay/neuter, micro chip and vaccinate. But their service ends when they hand you your sleepy dog and a bottle of pain medicine. If you have any problems, call your vet.

So I did… again. Warm compresses to her aching and leaking breasts. And “take away the cat toys”, we were instructed, to end her delusion. It broke all of our hearts when she whined and searched the closets and pulled the cushions off the couches, looking for her “babies”. It was a long couple of days.

Day by day. One challenge to the next, I worked with my dog. Her hormones settled. She settled. She and Emma found their groove and could be found lying side by side. She fell in line with us humans beautifully… so beautifully in fact, people who came to know her just a few months later, couldn’t believe the stories we told. She was calm, obedient, snuggly and followed me everywhere I went. I tell it now that – She just needed to work the streets out of her. Once she realized that she didn’t need to fight anymore to survive, that she was safe… that we were there to love and protect and care for her, she submitted.

She even won over my husband. One Father’s Day we gave him a coffee mug with pictures of the two of them on it and words that read- “There’s no love like the love of a Dad and the dog he didn’t want.” It was true.

Once we had a well adjusted dog, we moved forward with her doggie mastectomy.

I was never more grateful for my nursing skills when she came home with a drain and stitches and had to be sedated for 2 weeks to recover. It was another full time job caring for this ever-involved pup. And quite the work and expense, not knowing if it was all going to end in a devastating diagnosis after all.

Though her tissue “didn’t look good” when they opened her up, her pathology studies came back good- clean margins and no metastatic cancer! The hard work and chance paid off!

One man’s trash became another man’s treasure. From then on, she was the best damn dog!

She never went after the cat, rabbit, chickens or any of the other small pets. In fact, marching us out to the chicken coup twice a day was her favorite “chore.” She never got into the trash or chewed; though she’d take any scrap you offered her- never the picky eater. She only ever barked if someone approached the front door… and then she’d start wagging her tail.

She was fiercely loyal. I couldn’t get up and move from one couch to the next, without her getting up to follow me- even when her hips could hardly stand. When Emma would seize the opportunity to dart though the open gate, Pinkie always stayed behind. We used to joke that their dialogue would include Emma trying to convince Pinkie to come along- “Come on! We’ll come back at 2am. I promise you… I do it all the time! I go off, have a great adventure and come back in the middle of the night, scratch at the door and they let me back in.” Surely, we imagined Pinkie would respond “Uh uh… nope… I’ve been out there. I know what it’s like. These people are good to me… I ain’t taking no chances. You go ahead. I’m staying right here.” And sure enough, Emma would take off and Pinkie would stand on the porch watching her run.

She was sweet and snuggly. The kids forever had their limbs wrapped around her. Her soft coat was a welcome change from our hound’s stinky, wiry one. But boy did she shed!

She was a people dog. And she was particularly in-tune to those who needed love and security. Though Pinkie’s days on OUR beds ended with her obedience regimen and she found her new spot alongside Emma on the floor beside my bed. Each time we got a new foster child, even our first “unofficial” foster, she left my side and climbed into their bed with them on their first night. It was as though she knew what it felt like to be lost and scared and she could sense that in them.

Pinkie came to us when Emma first began to show signs of illness. I thought she would be our salve when Emma passed. And I guess she still was. But I thought we’d have more time with her. It’s hard to age an adult dog you find on the streets. Though they had a bit of a rough start, Pinkie bonded tremedously to Emma and her loyalty to her was evident until the end. Pinkie tended to Emma and checked up on her when she began to fail. When Emma was slow and could no longer lift her paw to scratch the door, Pinkie would wait for her and scratch for her. Pinkie declined rapidly after Emma died, just a year and a half ago.

A few days shy of 7 years, we relieved Pinkie of her suffering. A few licks of strawberry ice cream and she eased into my lap to close her eyes for the last time- our beloved vet and the whole family gathered in our living room. “Wednesday never came”, we said.

When I recall the story of how we met- the street dog that became my loyal companion, it occurred to me that the fractured fairytale fits our model so perfectly- hard work, resilience, patience and persistence, second chances, and above all else, love. Love truly conquers all.

I loved that dog more than any animal I have ever owned… but like all dogs seem to do, she loved us better. So much better.

Who Saved Who? Lessons learned from a not-so-perfect dog rescue.

“Who saved who?”….

Iā€™ve seen the bumper sticker with the paw print and the sentimental saying and I appreciate it for itā€™s worth. Iā€™ve seen first hand the bond between cats and dogs and their lonely owners. Animal rescues hold the potential to save many lives, tortured by solitude. Scientific studies have shown the benefit of animal camaraderie on mental health. And so, this truth doesn’t weigh lightly on my mind. Iā€™ve always loved animals. Fortunately for me though, they are less of a “need” and more of a “luxurious addition”.

A nurse who works full-time and blogs, two kids for whom schooling is a challenge and activity is a constant desire, and a husband who puts his all into providing for his family and yet is constantly trying to keep up with all their shenanigans …. No one here needed animals to keep them company. And yet thereā€™s a zoo here:

The 9-year-old rescue dog whoā€™s perfect, except for her propensity to sneak out of the yard and go hunting ā€¦ only to come home smelling like death. The cat who will piss in the laundry basket if you donā€™t keep her litter box clean. The rabbit who loves more than anything to pull her hay out of the box and toss it through the slated cage all over the floor, Ā if her 13-year-old owner doesnā€™t exercise her enough. The algae- eating fish who doesn’t do his job and the snake who thank god ā€¦ completely minds his own business, if only his 10-year-old owner would just remember to feed him on time! Oh yeah, and the frogs who need live crickets, which we toss in a powdered vitamin supplement just prior to feeding.

So, were we looking for a second dog? Haha funny. But she came to us ā€¦ without tags or a direction home. My intention was only to find her owner, but when no one came forward, we grew by another 4 paws. We made it official on FacebookĀ and sealed the deal to ‘commit’ by forking over the money to vaccinate, chip and spay her.

A new collar, matching bowls and freshly inscribed tags made it feel like a fairy tale ending.Ā Only it wasnā€™t quite that magical…..

You see ā€¦ after about a month and a spay that unfortunately ended an unknown pregnancy. Our sweet little rescue began to exhibit some undesirable behaviors and they took a toll on our family. She became aggressive and territorial. She obsessed about her sleep place and gathered cat toys as if they were her pups, defending them with vigor. Not to mention her constant barking became almost unbearable. It took a major toll on my day sleeping and an even bigger toll on my marriage. While I have an unrelenting affinity for saving lost creatures, my husband has a much easier time saying “Enough is enough”. I bought her some more time by explaining that her hormones were raging and her animal instincts were confused; But when she snapped at my husband as he tried to remove her from my bed, I knew her days were numbered if I didnā€™t take action soon.

Armed with the internet, an understanding vet and an undying desire to make this situation work, I took every feasible action I could. Daily walks, obedience training and a no-nonsense approach to her every behavior and household possessions became rote. I learned that it was my job to teach her that everything belonged to me and that she only gained access to them if I allowed it. Walks and playing fetch helped her to burn excessive energy and structure gave her expectations. This decreased her anxiety and increased her respect for us as humans. Within a week, I had a new dog. Within a month, we began to build trust again.

ā€œYou did such a good thing rescuing her!ā€, they said. ā€œYou saved her!ā€ and for a minute I believed all the hype. Itā€™s true! I didnā€™t need or really, for a minute, even want a second dog. But I saved her anyway. Iā€™m kind of a hero šŸ™‚

But every hero needs a little saving himself. And the truth is ā€¦ she saved me too – not from loneliness and not because I needed fulfillment in my life. Thatā€™s important … but I get that through home and work. She saved me because she taught me what I had forgotten that I needed. She reminded me.

She reminded me that I needed to get outside for fresh air and exercise. Sunshine and burning off energy is good for dogs and humans. I needed those walks and sunshine more than I ever realized. I had become lazy with my older dog, merely opening the back door to let her out into the fenced yard. She’s loving the walks now too!

She reminded me that yelling accomplishes nothing and that calm assertive energy is effective. Iā€™m a Momā€¦why did a dog have to remind me of that?!

She reminded me to be patient. Change doesnā€™t happen with one treat or one command but gradually over time and with repeated efforts.

She reminded me to be consistent. One of the fastest ways to sabotage your own efforts, in any relationship, is through a lack of consistency.

She reminded me that loving isnā€™t spoiling but learned respect and earned privileges followed by praise and affection .

She reminded me that when things are hard and the people you love the most are ready to give up – thatā€™s when you work the hardest. And you donā€™t ever give up until youā€™ve exhausted all options.

If the dog hadnā€™t learned. If she had bitten someone or posed a true threat to my familyā€™s safety – she would have had to find a new home. And I would have had to accept the possibility that she could be put down as a result of her age and aggressive signs. No doubt about it ā€¦ my family comes first! But Iā€™m glad she did learn and Iā€™m glad I did too.

It’s been almost 5 months since Pinkie came into our lives and into our home. She’s not perfect ….. but neither am I. We’re both a little anxious, can be mouthy and loud, have lots of energy and need a ton of physical affection. She has grown by leaps and bounds but it will take much more time before she has gained full trust in all things. Still, we both worked hard to make the relationship work and it paid off. She’s the perfect snuggle-buddy for my kids, the perfect guard dog for the house and she has befriended all of the household creatures beautifully … including my husband.

Through hard work, commitment and patience ……. another soul, another pup ā€¦ was saved.

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Rescuing

If I had all the money and resources in the world, one thing that Iā€™d love to do is rescueā€¦.more! (Iā€™ve already rescued my share of creatures). People and animals alikeā€¦I hate to see them sufferā€¦I want to share my love. While fostering children is something my husband and I have discussed a ton, we are not currently in a position to be able to take that on, but oh how I yearn to. So in the meantime, Iā€™ll have to settle for charity work and saving the occasional stray.

One such stray happened to cross my path this past February.
(Stopping to save random animals is something my family has an affinity for. My Dadā€™s side of the family taught this to us at an early age. Turtles, cats, dogs, even snakesā€¦ didnā€™t matterā€¦ if it looked like it needed help, we stopped. Iā€™m sure animal control is cringing!)

I was driving in the car with the kids, dropping a friend off when a skinny but clean yellow lab mix caught my eye. Walking along the neighborhood streets, a few neighborhoods over from my own, she was scavenging in various yards looking for scraps. When I saw her collar I pulled over with the intention of calling her owners. She came to me but when I checked her collar I discovered that she was missing tags. She hopped into my car willingly. ā€œYay!ā€, my daughter exclaimed. ā€œI needed a pay-it-forward activity for the day!ā€ LOL

Glad I could make the kids happy… convincing Daddy of our plan was another story!

The plan was to hold on to her just long enough to find the owners. I took her to get scanned for a micro chip but there was none. We made and put up signs, posted on local community FB pages, contacted the city and county animal control services, SPCA, Craigslistā€¦you name it! Not a single inquiry! We named her Pinkie.

But this story isnā€™t about how to adopt a dogā€¦ itā€™s about how to rescue one.

You see, when Pinkie came home with us, for the first couple of weeks she constantly followed so close behind me that I couldnā€™t get out of the gate without resorting to ridiculous physical contortions of my body. She would stick her head so close to the gate latch that to close it and leave her behind was a chore. Leave her in the house you say? Ha! It was just as ridiculous trying to get out of the house door and I feared her separation anxiety would lead to property destruction. Though fortunately, it never did.

So, every time I managed to get myself onto the other side of the gate and she would peer at me through the chained-link in angst, I would tell her calmly and gently,
ā€œIā€™ll be back. Iā€™m just going to pick up the kids / go to the store etc. It wonā€™t be long. Iā€™ll always come back.ā€ Then Iā€™d pet her through the fence and leave. I wouldnā€™t be gone for long.
And when I came home, sheā€™d be waiting, jumping up and down in excitement. When I greeted her, I told her again, ā€œYou see, I came backā€¦Iā€™ll always come back.ā€

The first couple weeks passed and Pinkie stopped trying to nose her way out of the gate when I left. She seemed to understand that I would come back. But around the house, she never let up. She was glued to my side and stationed at my feet. I couldnā€™t take a shower without her hanging her head over the tub. And when she had her surgery, I felt terrible that if I left the computer to refill my coffee sheā€™d jump up to follow. If I left the bed to use the bathroom, sheā€™d jump down and be at my heels.

More weeks passed and every time Iā€™d say, ā€œPinkie, Iā€™m coming right back. You can stay hereā€, sheā€™d follow behind me anyway. Until, finally, the day came when I woke-up and went to shower and she didnā€™t follow. Reluctant to turn around, I kept walking across the house, waiting to here the ā€œthudā€ of her paws jumping down off the bed. While I showered I kept saying to myself, ā€œSheā€™ll be in here any minute now.ā€ But….

When I returned to my room, she was still there, lying on my bed, waiting for me. Finally she understood. Finally, she believed me.

I’ll always come back.

You see, all it took was patience and gentle reassurance, that Iā€™d be back. Thatā€™s it! I never pushed her back, held her down or tied her up. I never yelled at or scolded her. Further more, I never had any expectations that she would change, though I wished she would for her own peaceful sake. My words probably never meant a thing to her-sheā€™s a dog. My tone and my actions though, probably spoke volumes. And then there was time. Time, was probably the most important factor of all. She just needed time.

Why is it that itā€™s so easy to accomplish this with dogs but our rules change when it comes to people. When it comes to rescuing humans, (weā€™re all in need of being rescued somehow) whatever hang-ups people come to us with, we want to change them. And we want to change them now! We find their clingy behaviors and habits annoying and we reject them and scold them and expect them to change with expediency.

But what if, instead, we gently reassured them? What if we loved them just the way they were and we told them that it was ā€œokayā€? What if we honored our promises and we always returned? What if we never yelled or scolded or ridiculed? What if we always embraced them instead of pushing them away or holding them at an armā€™s distance? What if we let go of expectations that they would change and instead allowed them all the time that they needed?

Now, certainly some dangerous behaviors/habits donā€™t allow for such a Zen approach due to imminent safety concerns-but Iā€™m not referring to those. Iā€™m referring to the every-day annoying habits and insecurities that we, like Pinkie, have as a result of our past. Perhaps it’s not in the form of being pressed to ones side but in the form of nagging, of worry, of forced closeness.

I was once very much in need of being rescued and I thank the lucky stars that I found a man who despite my annoying behaviors was patient and waited. He never scolded or yelled at me but he guided me and most importantly, he kept coming home. And yet here I am…. struggling like everyone else with certain persons in my life and their habitual hang-ups. Itā€™s not easy to always be patient and calm and understanding. In fact, it can be infuriatingly hard!

But Iā€™m going to keep trying- because I’m a better person because someone rescued ME. And because a skinny little stray reminded me that it might just pay off – that gentle reassurance and patience takes less energy and is more effective than any form of confrontation and that love can cure even the loneliest of hearts.