On November 13, 2012, I put down my dog, Scout, after having him for
9 years. He was 11. I am very sad, but not sad for the same reasons I was when
my other dogs died – the other dogs who hung out with me, who chased sticks and
balls, who aimed to enjoy and to please. I am sad because, of course, I will miss
Scout’s presence. He was a part of our day-to-day lives for many years. I’m sad because he won’t enjoy his walks, one
of the few things in life he really loved. I’m sad because he liked our new
neighborhood and seemed calmer here, the place with less noise – no student
pilots circling and circling overhead, no cars flying by, no neighbors with
fireworks. I’m sad because I will miss Scout, and our younger dog Layla will
miss him even more. He was her rock.
But I’m also sad because Scout didn’t live up to his abilities, and I take some of that blame. I didn’t learn until he was 7 that he would have made a
great air scent or cadaver dog. By
accident, we learned this when he freaked out at least 200 yards away
from the exact spot a woman’s body had been dumped. Scout dragged us to the location, luckily
after the police had already found the body. When I looked into air scent
training, I was told that they didn’t train dogs age 7 or older. So, I let that
go. Another dog whose talents or special skills I didn’t recognize until it seemed
too late. You wish they could talk and
tell you these things early in life. Then again, there is the time factor,
always the factor of time.
Scout wasn’t my best friend, but he was my friend and he was
a family member. He was a distant observer unable to fully break out of his
shell and trust. I tried luring him to me repeatedly when he was young, but he
wasn’t ready and, unfortunately, food was of little concern to him, so I
couldn’t bribe him with pieces of chicken or steak. I took him to dog obedience
classes, hoping that would help us bond. I would sit in one room of the house and call him. At most, he'd dart by like a ghost.
I finally decided to step back and
stop pushing, figuring he would come around when he was ready. But Scout would
never be fully ready. He made progress through the years, progress so slow that
others recognized it (and were sometimes in awe of it) when I barely did. I
saw progress when I returned from a trip to Belize (I had left the dogs home
with a pet sitter), and watched as Scout trailed behind the other dogs to greet
me at the door, standing back, curious but too timid to fully approach. I thought I noticed a look of relief in his eyes when he saw me. Then there was
the year of the hurricanes, in 2004, when we all packed up and went to my
aunt’s house in Florida's Panhandle. At her rural property, Scout
let down his guard. He ran off leash, came when called and even jumped in bed
with me although the alpha dog, Morgan (“The General”), was present with her
second in command, Jasmine. Even after The General died, Scout stayed in his shell.
At home, he was most comfortable in a closet – a
place with the least visual and auditory stimuli. I finally gave in and put his bed in there. When he did want company, he was most
comfortable entering the room when no one was looking, approaching from behind
and finding a corner to settle into for a brief period. He normally didn’t approach to be
petted, and never once rolled on his back for a tummy rub. Scout didn’t know
what tummy rubs were about. He didn’t
understand play unless it was with the other dogs when he was pretty sure no
humans were looking. He didn’t trust. My heart broke a little more when
our dog Jasmine died, and I would return home, but no one would come greet me at the door – Scout remained in his closet.
Scout’s story was that he was bred to be shown in
conformation. He was truly gorgeous – a white German shepherd dog who looked
like he was suspended in air when he trotted. His fearful behavior was attributed by various people to
a variety of factors: his breeding, the treatment he received while being
shown, “the white gene,” and to witnessing the mysterious death/murder of his
sister, who he was very close to, when he was 2, before he became my dog. Whatever
the reason, his breeder, being responsible, saw him at a show with the woman to
whom she had sold him and some of his litter mates, didn’t feel he and the
other dogs looked healthy, and took them back. She found me, or I found her,
through a white German shepherd rescue group. And there began our 9 years of a
less-than-ideal dog-human relationship.
When Scout was younger, he was so nervous he would bolt
whenever he had the slightest opportunity. Luckily, he would run to the nearby
woods rather than the heavily traveled road, and he would come home when he was
ready, usually after I had spent a few hours frantically searching for him. Although he loved
his walks, he loved them, like he loved anything, only on his terms – alone or
with his dog-mates in areas where there were no other people or animals.
Common dog walking places, even the beach, were not comfortable places for
Scout, but I still felt cruel not taking him places due to his misery in public. Scout seemed like he was on
sensory overload all the time; there was just too much going on in the
world.
I talked to my vet
about him. We did the obedience classes. I tried various tranquilizers on him, particularly during
thunderstorms or on the Fourth of July. Medications that would knock out the
other dogs seemed to have absolutely no affect on Mr. Metabolism. Through the years, as I waited for Scout to
decide to come to me and be my friend, I told him I would never hurt him, that
I would never be mean to him, even when he would try to scramble past me
so quickly (as if someone was chasing him) that he’d dig his claws
into my bare feet or knock into my knee with his hard head. He wouldn’t come
when called for the first seven years I had him – except that time at my aunt’s property;
therefore, my other shepherds would herd him into the house for me. It was our
daily, somewhat amusing, ritual.
After Jasmine died, I decided to take a chance and let Scout
off-leash in the woods. He did great. He was eight-years-old and mellowing.
Finally, there was something he relished – just us in the woods. He could be trusted to come to me when I called him. He was more
than gentle with other animals, once alerting us to a wounded baby raccoon. He
still lived in a closet most of the time. But when he was in the back yard, he
was still often pacing, pacing, pacing. Or standing at the door longingly staring in (to get into his closet), unless I walked toward him, which would cause him to take off again. I often said that in the years I had him, I would
have more successfully tamed a wild animal.
Scout wouldn’t play with the other dogs if he thought or
knew anyone was watching, so it was especially fun peeking at the dogs carrying
on in the yard. He wouldn’t eat if he thought anyone was looking. He'd poke his head out of his closet and wait until I was out of sight before beginning his
meal. He had stomach issues his entire life, issues likely associated with his
general nervousness, and he was usually on medication.
At the age of 11, I thought Scout would have great
difficulty with a move we made – new house, new neighborhood. We moved November
1. Something changed. He liked it. He loved his walks, even though his back
legs wouldn’t always cooperate, and he would stumble and fall. He actually
seemed happy to see us when we came home, and began to approach us head-on to
be petted. I thought: Finally! Old Scout is happy. The difference was our new neighborhood was
quiet. There are no planes flying
directly overhead, there is very little traffic. And there are fantastic
woods to explore every day with the smells of many wild animals. Scout died
13 days after we moved.
There would probably be over a million words of advice for
me, as there have been over another dog we have who has special needs and whose
issues are on the other end of the spectrum – pure obnoxiousness rather than
shyness. There probably are a million things I could have done differently or
better with Scout to make him a happier dog and a “better” companion. But the
fact of the matter is there are dogs that really aren’t the traditional
tear-licking devoted companions we all know, love and expect. There are dogs that are different, just like
people. There are dogs with issues that some of us don’t have the
time (because we work) or the resources to handle perfectly. There are dogs that perhaps nobody is able to
cure.
It’s wonderful that we live in a country that is learning to
respect animals. And, just like America, so many of us seek absolute perfection
in this area, too. I had two nearly perfect dogs before Scout, so I aimed for
that experience with him, of course. But added to the pressure we put
on ourselves to create the perfect animal companion is also the rigidity and judgment
from others out there in the dog world who act as if you don’t do things a
certain way when you have a "difficult "dog – that way often equating to feeding raw, constant obedience classes, hiring a behaviorist, paying an animal communicator,
constantly exercising, or, better yet, engaging the dog in a regular activity
like search-and-rescue, agility or dance – then you are doing a great
disservice to the animal, and, well, you suck.
I felt actually run out of an online German shepherd forum
when I asked for more input about a different rescue dog of ours -- the obnoxious one with genetic issues. He
was not responding well to the usual exercise-them-like-crazy (over-exercise
results in seizures with him); I attempted to see if herding might be what he
needed to do, but was told I did that all wrong. Then I made the mistake of commenting that we sometimes referred to this dog as "Corky" because he looks like he has Down syndrome. Most people realize, I think, that you have got to insert humor in difficult situations. Ohhh nooo. I was scolded to never call a dog names like that (I really wondered about the thought behind this, as do you think if I called a Farsi-speaking visitor to our country "Corky," he/she would get what I was saying? Of course not, but somehow, in the Dog Perfect World, my dog would understand that I was referring to him as a long-gone TV character and he would get more of a complex because of it.) It soon became clear that
because I work full-time and was not willing or able to invest an incredible
number of hours a week with this dog, along with an incredible amount of money,
I was, well, like those dog owners
who don’t do the animal justice. Someone finally suggested with disdain that I
take the dog to a rescue group and donate money to them so that they could find
him a good home. Their view was clear: Do it my way (the perfect way) or don’t do
it at all – a message I find astounding in a country where millions of dogs are
euthanized in shelters each year.
Experiencing that, and knowing Scout, I began to realize
what human moms must go through, with the expectations of doing it all, and
doing it all perfectly and creating and forming this perfect, preferably
gifted, child who is going to wow the world and make all of us proud. We’ve
taken that into the world of animals as well. I witnessed it at a dog show when a
German shepherd just didn’t perform the way he was expected to perform and was shoved back
into his crate by an owner with a look of pure disgust on her face. We place the ideal of perfection on ourselves, and others feed into that by also expecting it of us.
What I see as we seek perfection in ourselves as parents – human parents
or dog parents – is that we lose sight of something incredibly important in life: accepting
things, people and animals, sometimes just as they are, seeing potential and
striving for that, but knowing when to accept another living being as that
being is. When we pretend that all dogs can be perfect companions, we lie to
ourselves, and we set up people for discouragement and even shame as we set up
dogs for pure failure, failure that too often results in being dumped at
shelters. Maybe the dog just couldn’t
get to that perfect spot where the people expected him or her to be. Maybe the people
really did try to get him there. Maybe they had jobs and other family
activities. And maybe they shouldn’t judge themselves or be judged for that. Maybe the judgment is in part what causes some
people to just give up.
If we learn to accept that dogs, like people, are imperfect,
learn to recognize and accept what they are capable of as companions, maybe our
lowered or more realistic expectations could result in more dogs
staying in homes rather than being given up on and placed in shelters, or maybe it could result
in more shelter dogs being adopted and kept.
For life. In their imperfection. Maybe our attention would be better focused on helping those dogs that have been dumped, and those millions of animals living on the other end of the spectrum, those being abused and neglected.
Scout's death, like most profound experiences in life, caused me to think again of the area where life is really lived, but the place we so often try to avoid: that non-extreme area between the all-black and the all-white. Scout perfectly taught me that imperfection -- even being odd -- is really ok. I loved him anyway, and I miss him anyway. In
fact, I realize, it is his crazy imperfection that I miss most about his blessed spirit.
Pen, you are a gifted writer and lover of dogs, and I really think this post is an awesome tribute to Scout. I have several imperfect dogs and I agree with you, it just endears them to me more, and makes me a better person for being the one willing to welcome them home. I saved this blog to my favorites, and hope to read many more! Miss you!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful...
ReplyDeleteThis is a beautiful, Penny. I can relate to the idea that we need to give up our expectations of that perfect dog, and at the same time, devote time and attention to learning what they really need. After 7 years, I have accepted that my dog is attention-seeking and at times overly hyper and hard to handle. That being said, I made a choice to adopt her, and to make her a part of my family for life. I also struggle with guilt issues, as parenting, work, and health issues have made it more difficult to get in that daily quality time. But I credit you for reminding me that dogs are more than animals, they are individuals with their own personalities, needs, and issues. Above everything, however, Scout knew that you loved her, and her life was better for it. And yours was as well. A world without dogs would be a very sad place! Thanks for sharing, and thinking of you.
ReplyDeleteYou are a gifted, scribe. Empathy.
ReplyDelete