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Life With a Dog
by Craig Wilson
My life changed dramatically
ten years ago. I didn't get married or divorced, didn't survive a
life-threatening disease, didn't have a religious experience, then
again, maybe I did. I got a dog. Murphy is a soft-coated wheaten
terrier, a feisty Irish girl with a mop of blonde hair and a mind of her
own, as I discovered the day I picked her up.
That first evening, I fed
her, left her on her new bed in the kitchen, and went to watch the
evening news. Within minutes, her short legs had conquered the stairs,
and there she stood in the middle of the den, staring at me as I sat on
the sofa. The look on her face said, "If you think I'm going to
live here with you and stay in the kitchen, you're sadly mistaken."
Murphy has pretty much set
the rules of the house ever since. She sleeps on the bed, guards her
favorite chair and eats cheddar cheese Goldfish crackers as her nightly
hors d'oeuvres during cocktails. She is a herder, a ferreter and an
honorary member of the neighborhood watch program. She patrols. She has
taught me where all the cats reside, which garden gates have dogs behind
them, and which hydrants are the most popular stops. Murphy has taken me
down alleys and lanes and side streets I didn't even know existed. She
stops to smell the bushes. She makes me linger. Little did I
realize that with a pet, I was headed toward a life of pockets stuffed
with plastic bags and cookie jars filled with dog treats. Who knew that
the mail would no longer be delivered, nor the trash picked up, in the
same quiet manner? Each visitor's arrival is now announced. Murphy
sees to that, standing on her hind legs and barking out the window at
the daily invaders. I now see things from her point of view, from her
perspective. No longer is a walk through the woods just a walk through
the woods; it's an adventure. Squirrels! Geese! Field mice! Murphy
alerts me to all animals, large and small, and protects me from all
danger. No longer is a stream just a stream. It's a place to dance, to
drink, to frolic, until every last hair on her back is wet. And no
longer is a spotless kitchen floor a high priority. Hair on the sofa?
Who even sees it anymore?
All my friends with children
say they wonder what life was like before the kids came along. I wonder
the same about my life before Murphy.
What did I do with my
mornings before she started coming to sit outside the bathroom door to
watch me shave? Who made a fool out of me before she came along? Well, a
number of people, actually, but believe me, it's much more pleasant to
be made a fool of by a dog. I talk about her at work until my colleagues
walk away. I feed her from the table. We kiss in public. And I'm not
ashamed of any of it. In fact, some of my best conversations in the past
ten years have been with Murphy. On our morning walks, I'll often
confess to her that I don't have a clue about what I'm doing with my
life. Sometimes she can sense the gravity in my voice --- that I'm
serious --- so she'll stop, turn around, and cock her head as if to say,
"You know, boss, I wish I knew. But it'll be fine. Really, it
will." And that look always reassures me that everything will turn
out okay. Yes, her arrival has meant that after-work detours for drinks
with friends have come to an end. But I'd been going to happy hours for
20 years, and they weren't making me any happier.
Foolish me. I'd spent half
my life looking for love in all the wrong places. Little did I realize
it could be waiting for me back at home by the front door, ready with a
big, wet kiss and a wagging fanny. "You're back!" she says,
sliding down the hallway on a rug. "Let's play! Let's eat! Let's
rub bellies and go upstairs and watch the nightly news!"
Okay, so I'm getting a
little carried away here. But people who say they don't have time for a
dog mystify me. What they're saying is they don't have time for
unconditional love. Can that be true? We who have stumbled into the
spiritual world of dogs know we are very lucky. We will never be alone
again. Never be unloved again. Never be bored. We will always have
someone who thinks we are wise beyond our years, someone who won't judge
us by our waist size or the kind of car we drive. (Although I think
Murphy would like it if I got a convertible so she could enjoy the wind
sweeping through her hair without having to stick her head out the
window.)
Over the years, I have met
many wonderful pet lovers through Murphy. The "dog people"
congregate in the park, on the street, at the neighborhood corner
store --- anywhere that two pups can dance a pas de deux. We talk
fleas. We talk ticks. And I confess, there have been more than a few
early-morning birthday parties for the likes of Buster and Sheba, Maggie
and Amos. Murphy has been feted, too. Champagne for the adults; party
treats for every guest with a tail.
Are we fools? Perhaps. But
we're happy fools. And our dogs don't seem to mind. At this very moment,
Murphy is lying under my desk, sprawled out on her side, eyes closed,
her neck perfectly placed across the instep of my foot. She is content
but not nearly as content as her owner. I didn't get just a dog ten
years ago. I got a life.
[ Up ] [ Life Lessons Learned From A Dog ] [ Life With A Dog ] [ Litany For Dogs ] [ The Secret Story Of The First Samoyed ] [ Ten Commandments ] [ Things A Dog Can Teach Us ] [ Tribute To A Dog ] [ Walk With An Old Dog ] [ Westminster Fantasy, With Meri ] [ Why Get A Dog? ]
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