Friday, September 12, 2014

"I'll Be Back"--(Message to a Border Collie)


"You stay here.  I'll be back.  I'll be back in a little while!"

Oh, those hated words!  Those words you hate worse than any other words you know.  There are other words you dislike.  "No" will cause your face to fall; "Down!" or "Off" must be avoided whenever possible.  But "I'll be back" means that you will be alone here.  I wish I did not have to say them, for when I do, when you hear those words, you know.  I have met people who assure me that dogs do not feel emotion.  Well, maybe not; but dogs sure do have expressions.  Yours, when you hear those dreaded words, breaks my heart.

For, if I could stay, what a day we would have!  We would start with a walk, a good long one, visiting the cows, always fascinated by the black and white dog passing them.  Sometimes they stroll to the edge of their pasture, reaching their big heads over the fence, mooing after you, their cries pushing you along.  Perhaps a calf would pace you, running as close to the fence as she could get, as happened one day last summer.  If calves could grin, that one did!  On our walk, we would explore the woods and try to answer the unanswerable: how do those birds run in the sky?

While the morning stayed cool, we would find sheep to work.  They are so close, really, just down the road.  But the time to work them is when I am not home; for they are not OUR sheep, and we must bend to another's will in this matter.  And after you stared the sheep into your bidding, gracefully moving them here and there, we would leave the field for home, you happy and fulfilled.

At home, you would endure a bath, knowing that you would be brushed into ecstasy afterward.  Or, with warm enough weather, you’d have another quick run to dry off.  Then it would be rest time.  I would give you a good soup bone, fresh from the freezer, that you could munch on as you rested.  And I would write stories of beautiful dogs, trying to express the magic of the "eye", the soulfulness in the heart of dogs born to work.  If no one read them, it wouldn't matter. Perhaps, someday, someone would stumble on them, surprised that in the life of this ordinary woman there simmered a passion for these other creatures--creatures who gave her more than she could repay.  Later we would play ball, chase sticks, work together in the house, picking up, cleaning.  Maybe we’d even practice our weave poles for agility.

If I could stay....

But, I cannot stay.  I cannot even help you understand why I must go.  And so, your forehead wrinkles, your head falls, and you go into the backyard to lay under a tree, right by the fence, where my last sight will be of you watching me leave.

During the day, I will wonder about you--what you are doing, if you are aware of the passage of time.  When the afternoon sun lengthens the shadows, do you begin to anticipate my arrival home?  Do you stay outside, watching the world go by?  Do you bow before Pluto, ten years your senior, when we are gone like you do when we are here?  Do you watch him redecorate the backyard's topography?  He had not dug for years before you came; your arrival rejuvenated an old dog.  As he cannot run or jump with you, he proves his superiority in other areas--and he has proved he can dig with the best of them. 

Or perhaps you come in the house through your special door and rest your head on a stray shoe belonging to a human you love.  Do you dream your time with the sheep, your travel on the walk that you must take alone and asleep?

At last I arrive home.  At times, my mother has been as glad to see me as you are when I arrive home; but she's the only one. You wiggle and stretch to reach my face, whimpering your joy..  As I kneel to your level, your paws encircle my neck and you lick my face clean of makeup and dirt from the day.

We do take our walk--just not as far or as fast as we would have liked.  Dad comes home and you play at chasing water from a hose, catching a frisbee sailing overhead.  But you do not get as much attention as you would like because we are busy with life's details.  As night takes over, we prepare to sleep, and you settle down with us, used to the routine.  At bedtime you pick your place, perhaps on the bed.  But maybe you make way for the cat and sleep on the floor, where it's cooler.  As long as you're close to one of your humans, breathing in the person's scent, safe in their presence, you sleep well.

And in the morning, when we arise, you wiggle hello and grin hopefully.  Dad takes you out for a brief walk, bathroom break, morning greeting.  We dress, gather our belongings.  And then the dreaded moment comes.


"I'll be back...." 

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

The Welcome



I hear it! I hear the car! HER car! And she's coming this way! Oh, oh, I must run in and grab a gift! I must greet her with a gift! Oh, 'BONK' missed the step. No matter, I must hurry. Move over, doggy door! She's coming, she's coming! Gift, gift, where, what, oh, oh, oh, ah! A plastic bottle she drinks from, right here on top of the container they call trash!

Oh, perfect. She's coming, she's coming! Oh, oh, oh... The door! I hear the door sound that sounds right before she comes in!

Oh, it's OPENING! SHE'S HOME! Oh, oh, 'wiggle, wiggle, wiggle' I cannot be still! You're home! And look, look, I have this nice bottle! Oh, oh, you're home! YOU'RE HOME!

I have missed you so much, you've been gone hours, weeks, days, years! And so much has happened! A dog ran by and I chewed a tree and Pluto slept under the house and it rained a little! Oh, oh, oh! You're home, you're home!

And you're touching me! I can't stand it, it's so marvelous! Oh, and you're speaking! "Murble, murble, good boy, murble, murble." YES! Your happy voice. Oh, I'm about to burst! I'm so happy, happy, happy! Yes! I want to jump! I'm not supposed to jump, but oh, oh, just a little jump!

"Off."

Darn. Oh, I cannot be still. I'll roll over and wiggle on my back! Oh, yes! She's rubbing me-my tummy, my head, my sides! Oh, oh, oh. Now what? Now where's she going? Oh, oh, yes! Back to the room where we sleep at night! Great! It has the big pad we sleep on and 'L-E-A-P' I can get up here close to her. And here she comes!

Oh, oh, oh! I can stand on my legs and put my paws around her neck and-uh oh. Can't lick with this bottle in my mouth. But it's my present to her! Oh, oh, what to do? And she's rubbing me! But I want to lick her, oh, oh, I think I'm about to burst!

"Off."

Darn. Drop the bottle. Oh, YES! She's coming back! She took off the pieces she puts on her eyes, and I can stand and 'lick, lick' I love you, I love you, I love you, I love 'lick, lick, lick' you taste so good, salty, sweet, I love that stuff you smear on your face every day, I love to lick it off, oh, oh, and you're rubbing me again!

My back, my head, my ears, oh, oh 'lick, lick, lick'. "Murble, murble, Mac, good boy, murble, murble.

"Off."

Darn.

I will lay here and watch her. Watch her peel her fur-it's not very warm fur, I don't think. How does she do that? And I will get that look on my face that always makes her come and rub me. The look where I roll my eyes up, and keep my head flat here and she will come...and she's putting on her play skin! YES! We will play-sometime. My tail cannot be still. I am SO happy, happy, happy.

Now she's going in the room with the wonderful water bowl! I LOVE that water bowl - always cool, clean water! She'll be out in just a minute, just a minute, just a.....yes, she's coming! She's here again.

Oh, oh, oh....

Now back to the room with the box that has pictures and sounds. Ah, I know what happens now. Yep, she's laying down on the big pad there. Now she'll sleep. But that's okay.

She's HOME!
SHE'S home.
She's home.

And she smells tired. So I will lay beside her here and guard her and wait while she sleeps. And when she wakes up she won't smell so tired. And we'll play and play.

S-i-g-h. I'll just rest with her now, and smell her while she sleeps. And wait again. For, the next thing that happens, HE'LL be home. And then, oh, oh, zzzzzzzzz........

©Jana Mauney