A new dog has joined the pack. This is our
sixteenth greyhound, and Geno is very sweet.
I am not thrilled about the name. First of all,
they spelled it wrong. Americans! Also, Mom finds the whole Gina/Geno thing
pretty hilarious. It’s starting to wear off. I may just call him Gee. That
could be kind of cool, because in the project I am working on now, the romantic
leads are Gee and Jane, so if Geno and Jane become really close, that could be
cute. (No, I did not intentionally name the female lead after my dog. It was
just a good name for her.)
We were not specifically looking for an
additional dog, but I think it is good. Jack is fourteen, and he is doing great
for his age, but that is old. We’ve lost a few at 14 and only Jack actually
made it to 15. Mom is concerned that Jane will not do well alone, and that’s
fair. Jane is so out there anyway that it probably would not take much to push
her over. Geno fits in well.
The timing was a little fun, because he came
while we had just started sitting for Milo for two weeks, so for several days I
was walking four, and that is harder. Honestly, walking three is harder than
walking two, but I know that at whatever point it switches back to two I am
going to hate it, so I will gladly walk three. I think I did walk six once.
The most we have ever had in the house at one
time is eight, when we had five and some sitting jobs overlapped. In a way that
is awesome, with all those long bodies and long legs, you notice. I think the
house is only 1400 feet. Anyway, back then Mom would help me with the walks,
but since her knees the doctor does not really want her walking lively dogs on
our rough road shoulders.
We had to move another dog bed into my room
since Jack is usually using the one that was already there. Now that I am
telecommuting I am often working flanked by both dogs. He seems to do well with
my music. I think he likes Black Parade and Danger Days better than Revenge,
but I think that one is a bit higher frequency, so I can see how that would be
an issue for a dog. I play the other two more anyway. Geno left for Disc 1 of
the Essential Clash, but came back for Disc 2.
I mention that because he seems to have attached
pretty quickly, and tends to follow me around. Since he had been living with
another family for four years, we thought there might be some grieving. Maybe
it helped that he went back to the kennel for a week in between. This is where
I’m going to segue into a bit of a rant.
People, animals are major commitments. They love
you deeply and wholeheartedly, and to suddenly decide that one is inconvenient
after years of attachment is awful. I was a little worried it would be like
Chili. We had sat for Chili for years, from when his owner was a young single
guy. Then he got married, and it was fine, and they had a baby, and it was
fine, and then the dog snapped at the toddler, and they didn’t want him anymore.
I understand the concern, and I have said myself
that greyhounds may not be the best dogs for families with young children, but
I also know that it can be managed, and we had other sitting clients that had
children join the family and it worked out just fine. In Chili’s case, he was
already older, and we had him for less than a year, which I think they could
have managed. As it was, our paper delivery person had a vehicle that sounded
like theirs, so every morning Chili would run to the window thinking they had
come back for him, and they never did.
It’s not just dogs. We took a cat for someone
who was moving once, and I don’t know how impossible it would have been to have
managed keeping the cat, but I do know that Tasha never bonded with us. She was
always at the window staring out, and it did not matter how kind we were, she
never cared for us. One day she escaped, and we found her by the road. Maybe it
was for the best because she was never going to be happy with us, but it felt
awful.
I know it’s not always like that. Sheba, Laddie,
RK, Westin, and Harold had all had other homes, but still totally bonded with
us. We never knew Barley’s background, but since he was found filthy, starving,
and sick, maybe learning to love us was easy. Dundee actually snubbed her
former owner after we’d had her for a while. In that case, it saved her life
that they took her when they did, but then it was like six years of neglect.
(Actually, Jane also had two previous homes, but
very short term. A dog that crazy needs some real suckers to get by.)
My point with this isn’t to discourage anyone
from adopting pets. There are a lot of pets needing homes, and they should get
them, and bonding with an animal is a wonderful experience. It can be great for
teaching children responsibility and compassion. It’s a beautiful thing.
Just don’t become part of the problem. They have
so much love to give. When they invest their heart in you, don’t pull it away
from them.
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