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lord1234
09-23-2004, 04:08 PM
a quick edit: I don't wanna see any tl;dr there won't be one...read it...its important.
HOW COULD YOU?

By Jim Willis 2001

When I was a puppy, I entertained you with my antics and made you
laugh. You called me your child, and despite a number of chewed shoes and a
couple of murdered throw pillows, I became your best friend. Whenever I
was"bad," you'd shake your finger at me and ask "How could you?" -- but
then you'd relent and roll me over for a bellyrub. My housebreaking took a
little longer than expected, because you were terribly busy, but we worked
on that together. I remember those nights of nuzzling you in bed and
listening to your confidences and secret dreams, and I believed that life
could not be any more perfect. We went for long walks and runs in the park,
car rides, stops for ice cream (I only got the cone because "ice cream is
bad for dogs," you said), and I took long naps in the sun waiting for you
to come home at the end of the day. Gradually, you began spending more time
at work and on your career, and more time searching for a human mate. I
waited for you patiently, comforted you through heartbreaks and
disappointments, never chided you about bad decisions, and romped with glee
at your homecomings, and when you fell in love. She, now your wife, is not
a "dog person" -- still I welcomed her into our home, tried to show her
affection, and obeyed her. I was happy because you were happy. Then the
human babies came along and I shared your excitement. I was fascinated by
their pinkness, how they smelled, and I wanted to mother them, too. Only
she and you worried that I might hurt them, and I spent most of my time
banished to another room, or to a dog crate. Oh, how I wanted to love them,
but I became a "prisoner of love."

As they began to grow, I became their friend. They clung to my fur
and pulled themselves up on wobbly legs, poked fingers in my eyes,
investigated my ears, and gave me kisses on my nose. I loved everything
about them and their touch -- because your touch was now so infrequent --
and I would have defended them with my life if need be. I would sneak into
their beds and listen to their worries and secret dreams, and together we
waited for the sound of your car in the driveway.

There had been a time, when others asked you if you had a dog, that
you produced a photo of me from your wallet and told them stories about me.
These past few years, you just answered "yes" and changed the subject. I
had gone from being "your dog" to "just a dog," and you resented every
expenditure on my behalf.

Now, you have a new career opportunity in another city, and you and
they will be moving to an apartment that does not allow pets. You've made
the right decision for your "family," but there was a time when I was your
only family. I was excited about the car ride until we arrived at the
animal shelter. It smelled of dogs and cats, of fear, of hopelessness.

You filled out the paperwork and said "I know you will find a good
home for her." They shrugged and gave you a pained look. They understand
the realities facing a middle-aged dog, even one with "papers."

You had to pry your son's fingers loose from my collar as he screamed
"No, Daddy! Please don't let them take my dog!" And I worried for him, and
what lessons you had just taught him about friendship and loyalty, about
love and responsibility, and about respect for all life. You gave me a
good-bye pat on the head, avoided my eyes, and politely refused to take my
collar and leash with you. You had a deadline to meet and now I have one,
too.

After you left, the two nice ladies said you probably knew about your
upcoming move months ago and made no attempt to find me another good home.

They shook their heads and asked "How could you?"

They are as attentive to us here in the shelter as their busy
schedules allow. They feed us, of course, but I lost my appetite days ago.
At first,whenever anyone passed my pen, I rushed to the front, hoping it
was you that you had changed your mind -- that this was all a bad dream ...
or I hoped it would at least be someone who cared, anyone who might save
me. When I realized I could not compete with the frolicking for attention
of happy puppies, oblivious to their own fate, I retreated to a far corner
and waited.

I heard her footsteps as she came for me at the end of the day, and I
padded along the aisle after her to a separate room. A blissfully quiet
room.

She placed me on the table and rubbed my ears, and told me not to
worry. My heart pounded in anticipation of what was to come, but there was
also a sense of relief. The prisoner of love had run out of days. As is my
nature, I was more concerned about her.

The burden which she bears weighs heavily on her, and I know that,
the same way I knew your every mood. She gently placed a tourniquet around
my foreleg as a tear ran down her cheek. I licked her hand in the same way
I used to comfort you so many years ago. She expertly slid the hypodermic
needle into my vein. As I felt the sting and the cool liquid coursing
through my body, I lay down sleepily, looked into her kind eyes and
murmured "How could you?"

Perhaps because she understood my dogspeak, she said "I'm so sorry."
She hugged me, and hurriedly explained it was her job to make sure I went
to a better place, where I wouldn't be ignored or abused or abandoned, or
have to fend for myself -- a place of love and light so very different from
this earthly place. And with my last bit of energy, I tried to convey to
her with a thump of my tail that my "How could you?" was not directed at
her. It was you, My Beloved Master, I was thinking of. I will think of you
and wait for you forever.

May everyone in your life continue to show you so much loyalty.


The End

A note from the author:


If "How Could You?" brought tears to your eyes as you read it, as it did
to mine as I wrote it, it is because it is the composite story of the
millions of formerly owned pets who die each year in American and Canadian
animal shelters. Anyone is welcome to distribute the essay for a
noncommercial purpose, as long as it is properly attributed with the
copyright notice.

digitard
09-23-2004, 04:35 PM
So sad.

I almost wanna leave work and go home and play w/ the dog since he was sad I was leaving this morning.

RevBrown
09-23-2004, 05:17 PM
Damn man.
I just had to leave my two dogs. That hurts like hell. They are just down the street at my mom's house and I see them atleast every other day(more often whenever possible). But that still hurts

AcemanPB
09-23-2004, 05:35 PM
I'm going to miss my dog when I go to college...

CasingBill
09-23-2004, 05:57 PM
I just rescued a dog from a shelter. He is a 7 mos. old mastiff named Dante. He is my buddy and I would never leave him. I cried when I had to put my last dog to sleep.

lord1234
09-23-2004, 06:15 PM
i rescued a dog whose owner had the goodness of heart to offer to me (a coworker) the chance to take this dog in. I love him already and i have had him about a month.

Yet another gratuitous chance to post his picture

http://www.jayloo.com/files/pics/8000/Cute_Cookie_001_8466_rs.jpg

CasingBill
09-23-2004, 06:21 PM
my turn


http://images1.fotopic.net/?iid=yffmxi&outx=800&oq=0

Kevn 419
09-23-2004, 08:29 PM
that was sad, im going to pet my dog right now...

is that a border collie lord1234? i have one that looks almost that exact same.

lord1234
09-23-2004, 08:58 PM
actually its a springer spaniel with a LITTLE bit of collie in him..

Halliday
09-23-2004, 09:28 PM
I could not even read that whole story.

AcemanPB
09-23-2004, 09:56 PM
...

oneworld
09-24-2004, 10:30 AM
if your a dumb sh** and you no it lick your nose!

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v43/j-man777/100_0256.jpg



this is my puppy...shes 2 now...

HoppysMag
09-24-2004, 11:26 AM
i gotta say, iv spent my life so far keeping my distance from situations, i never let anything get to me, but when we had to put my dog of 15 years to sleep ( he had cancer) i cried like a little girl, and am not ashamed to say so. i think its horible that people get dogs because they are cute as puppies but then no longer want them when they get older. a dog is a comitment no less sencere than a child. the animal loved you unconditionaly, and it angers me to hear about people who abandon dogs or put them to sleep because they are incompitant and cant handle the responsibility

teufelhunden
09-24-2004, 11:28 AM
Knew what was coming.. couldn't read to the end.. and I've never even had a dog. :(

digitard
09-24-2004, 01:31 PM
http://www.todaysgamer.com/images/r1.jpg

He's 5 months old now.. but thats when we got him about 2 1/2 months ago. He was a 10 week old super cute puppy. Now he's a 5 month old shoe eating super cute puppy. He has a "nest" and takes everything he finds (clothes, etc) to it. Its so cute.

GA Devil
09-24-2004, 02:02 PM
thats the thing i dont understand how some people can think of pets as disposable. They have a heart and feelings just like us. I have 3 dogs, a cat (who thinks he is a dog and barks) and a snake. I have went through alot of hell in my life and had to go without many times to make sure they all were taken care of the way they deserve to be. I just dont get how people can take something like that in and then turn it away. I understand that is a "story" but it happens everyday in real life.

Jeffy-CanCon
09-24-2004, 02:43 PM
Very sad, very touching.

Years ago, due to changing circumstances in my life I had to give up my dog. I'm glad to be able to say that I found him a good home, but it took a long time to get over it. Someday I hope to get another furry friend, but I will wait until the time and circumstances are right.

Jeffy-CanCon
09-24-2004, 03:25 PM
From www.theglobeandmail.com

It's worth the wait for an old friend to make it to the end of the dock

By Roy MacGregor
Friday, September 24, 2004 - Page A2

COLD LAKE, ONT. -- 'You will know when it's time." Fine, but how?

There is no expiry date on her that I can find, nothing at all to indicate shelf life apart from the obvious fact that she was clearly "best before" any of this came along.

There is no timely reminder in the mail, no message on the answering machine, no waiter discreetly laying her plastic card on the table and whispering that it is no longer considered "active."

She would take offence to that.

This is approximately the sixth time since May that we have come here together so she can spend her final days where she has always been happiest.

I carry her to the car, place her in a backseat specifically set up so she cannot fall off and get stuck anywhere -- and yet several times each drive I will have to stop and adjust her. One time it will be her back legs stuck between seat and door; another time she will be wedged headfirst between back seat and front seat.

She never says anything. Of course, it has been a year now since she last barked. Hard to believe, since it was always her wild, excited barking that announced we were here, the way others might hoist a flag.

What is totally mysterious is how this old dog, who cannot see, who cannot hear, still manages to wobble to her four feet when the car turns onto the long country road that leads in here, and how the panting that would have been described as "laboured" only hours earlier is now almost puppylike.

"You will know when it's time." They all say that. And surely, I thought when we headed out, this will be it.

There is a shovel leaning against the cabin. There is a place picked, back up in the bush by a huge rock that this mutt -- sort of "border-line collie" -- could once bounce onto in a single leap.

Now, however, she needs to be carried down the three small steps leading from the door to where she awkwardly does the required business and then needs carrying back up again.
I used to be baffled by stories such as the one about legendary hockey coach Roger Neilson pushing his old mutt around in a shopping cart because the dog could no longer walk and

Roger could not do what needed to be done, but now I understand.

Fifteen years ago, when this mutt was a puppy, we bought a cage that resembled a shopping cart without wheels. The idea was to place the dog in it when we went out. The first time we tried it we came home and found all four kids inside the cage with the puppy happily bouncing off it as she tried to get at them. They just didn't want to deal with her frenetic energy. Now they have trouble dealing with her lack of energy and are happy to carry her up and down the steps, more than willing to pick her up when she falls.

The end of a pet is one of the great curiosities of society. Within the family walls, it is devastating. One step beyond those walls it means little, two steps nothing.

I never expected her to last this long. She wouldn't make the May 24th weekend . . . she wouldn't make Canada Day . . . she wouldn't make Labour Day . . . now we say she won't make Thanksgiving. But summer did not come to this part of the country until early fall -- just as the Sixties didn't reach Canada until some time in the early seventies -- and so here she still is, still sniffing around the pine needles, still heading instinctively down toward the water.

Only with such a difference. Whereas once it was full bore down the hill and off the end of the dock, now it might be slipping and rolling down the hill and falling in.

It helps to remember that this old dog -- now so skinny, now so helpless -- once was the talk of the lake as she was known to swim entirely across it if she heard children swimming and figured she better round them up and head them back to shore.

"You will know when it's time." I suppose this is true enough. We knew when it was time the last time this situation had to be faced.

The lake is remarkably calm, unlike the man standing at the end of the dock wondering what to do, and when to do it. The old dog is at the steps, determined. She locks the back legs that no longer seem to work and hops once, slipping but holding, hops again and is down on her own, blindly heading into a world of a thousand nasal delights.

There is, perhaps unintentional, also a slight hop to her step.

And perhaps the man at the end of the dock misreads it.

But so what?

It is not time yet.

Not yet.

Ultimator
09-24-2004, 04:07 PM
My dog was awesome until he was hit by a semi. Now he looks like this:

Are you insane or just a moron? Who wants to see that? Skating on thin ice there buddy

oneworld
09-24-2004, 04:10 PM
aww..im sowwy...my dog doesnt leave the backyard!

SCpoloRicker
09-24-2004, 04:13 PM
Geez,

First off, reposting crappy PETA agit-prop is SPAM. There are already several post pictures of your dog/cat/furry.

Then, Ultimator displayed just how l33t he is by cloning crappy no comment SA pics from three years ago

:rolleyes:

Ultimator
09-24-2004, 04:43 PM
Then you displayed how big of a douche bag you are by posting in this thread, GJ!

And that pic is very high quality, not crappy.

EFF OFF

ZSigErik
09-24-2004, 05:45 PM
my lil mutt. for how annoying it is, i still love her. name's daisy.

http://www.jayloo.com/files/pics/9000/dais_1277.jpg

HoppysMag
09-24-2004, 06:44 PM
[QUOTE=Ultimator]My dog was awesome until he was hit by a semi. Now he looks like this:

QUOTE]


you sir, are sick.

SCpoloRicker
09-24-2004, 06:47 PM
Ultimator, even if that is your dog, posting that pic is probably not appropriate. I was suggesting that it wasn' t your dog, and that you were trying to be dismissive of the thread.

Both this, and the fact that this post is obviously cut and pasted from someone's chainmail...

BTW, in what way was your pic "very high quality?"

Ultimator
09-24-2004, 08:37 PM
You're right it's not my dog, and I was being dismissive of this thread.

:tard:

fcpchop
09-24-2004, 09:03 PM
wow thats really a hard story to read... both of them. it really puts a knot in ur throat

Rooster
09-25-2004, 01:37 PM
What a wuss. I would have shot the dog myself and saved 30 bucks.

RingOfScale
09-25-2004, 07:10 PM
so anyone else wanna join me in telling rooster to stfu ? (not funny)

DiSoRdeR
09-25-2004, 07:38 PM
Ultimator, I did not want to see that....

Ultimator
09-25-2004, 09:01 PM
Ok I'll put it away.

*zip*

wad04
09-26-2004, 01:07 AM
i cried for months when my dog died, so did my mom. i couldn't mention his name with out tearing up. i still love that dog. a year later we got the same kind of dog, actually distant cousins, but i dunno i still don't accecpt it.

Rooster
09-26-2004, 04:05 PM
"so anyone else wanna join me in telling rooster to stfu ? (not funny)"

You are darn right its not funny. I never laugh when I put an animal down.