Wednesday, December 31, 2008
Saturday, December 20, 2008
PALS Moments
Iggy and I just got back from our PALS visit. I really didn't want to go today. I had a headache, and it was so cold outside. But, as Don put it, I had made a promise. And of course I couldn't overlook the irony of it all. Relative to a headache and the temperature outside is life on the inside, no hope of parole.
Nameless lady: strapped into a wheelchair. For good measure, held in by an attached table over which she leans, trying to pull herself up and out. Every time I look at her, she's making eye contact. "Help me. Help me." As on the last visit and the one before that, I go over and hold her hand. She clings to mine, and gives me background information, none of which sounds good. "They're all dead," she says, and she could be referring to something in her past or to the room we're in right now. I don't talk to her because I don't know what to say that might help. I think she just wants out.
Helen: new, and sitting by herself in a hallway nook. She keeps falling down, she says. Her family and her dog live in Mackenzie Town, and she has no idea why they put her here. She can't bear to go to the main sitting room, because it's so sad. "I just don't fit in here," she says. We tell her we'll be back in two weeks and we'll keep our fingers crossed that she'll be back in Mackenzie Town. I'm thinking she couldn't be too hard to look after because she's so tiny. If she were my mother I'd just take her home with me.
Tawnia: Native, looks about 35. In a wheelchair by the door. A volunteer says to her, "Too cold to to outside for a smoke today, right?" Tawnia says, "I've been out three times already." Volunteer: "I wouldn't do it." Tawnia: "Well, you ain't got any Indian in ya."
Nameless lady: strapped into a wheelchair. For good measure, held in by an attached table over which she leans, trying to pull herself up and out. Every time I look at her, she's making eye contact. "Help me. Help me." As on the last visit and the one before that, I go over and hold her hand. She clings to mine, and gives me background information, none of which sounds good. "They're all dead," she says, and she could be referring to something in her past or to the room we're in right now. I don't talk to her because I don't know what to say that might help. I think she just wants out.
Helen: new, and sitting by herself in a hallway nook. She keeps falling down, she says. Her family and her dog live in Mackenzie Town, and she has no idea why they put her here. She can't bear to go to the main sitting room, because it's so sad. "I just don't fit in here," she says. We tell her we'll be back in two weeks and we'll keep our fingers crossed that she'll be back in Mackenzie Town. I'm thinking she couldn't be too hard to look after because she's so tiny. If she were my mother I'd just take her home with me.
Tawnia: Native, looks about 35. In a wheelchair by the door. A volunteer says to her, "Too cold to to outside for a smoke today, right?" Tawnia says, "I've been out three times already." Volunteer: "I wouldn't do it." Tawnia: "Well, you ain't got any Indian in ya."
Saturday, December 13, 2008
GINNY INTERMISSION
IGGY INTERMISSION
Thursday, December 11, 2008
KEYWORDS: "OUT THERE"
Well, Tristan has been adopted and goes to his new family at 5:30 today.
I'll miss his baby-fur and wet nose and the little snuffly-noises he makes when he's sleeping. As the volunteer coordinator at the Humane Society put it, saying goodbye to a dog leaves a wound. Which, she added, "...you sew up with another dog."
So we'll see what happens next. According to the e-mail I just fowarded to Don, there are more puppies that need fostering. These puppies are currently "out there" where day-time highs are going to be -20. Can we help?
Of course we can help! How many puppies are there? I will take all them all and keep them "in here" where it's warm, and there are so many pee-stains on the carpet that a few more won't hurt.
I'll miss his baby-fur and wet nose and the little snuffly-noises he makes when he's sleeping. As the volunteer coordinator at the Humane Society put it, saying goodbye to a dog leaves a wound. Which, she added, "...you sew up with another dog."
So we'll see what happens next. According to the e-mail I just fowarded to Don, there are more puppies that need fostering. These puppies are currently "out there" where day-time highs are going to be -20. Can we help?
Of course we can help! How many puppies are there? I will take all them all and keep them "in here" where it's warm, and there are so many pee-stains on the carpet that a few more won't hurt.
Sunday, December 7, 2008
TRISTAN THE SNOW DOG!
Friday, December 5, 2008
Hmmm... maybe I can chew you into the shape of a shoe...
BUT CAT FOOD IS GOOOOOD.....
Thursday, December 4, 2008
TRISTAN UPDATE
Tristan is doing great with training - the only thing holding him back from perfection is all that puppy-exuberance!
To the list of achievements in his little autobiography (a few messages down) we can add the following:
He now sleeps all night in the crate with no whining. During the day, he has a habit of falling asleep under my chair. He waddles into his crate and flops down quite happily when I wake him up and say, "Go to your crate."
He's still quite attached to me, but is gradually widening his territory. Today we went for a car ride with him in the crate. We left him for about 20 minutes where we could watch the car. He must have been quiet because people who walked past the car didn't even look in (and they certainly would have if Tristan was upset - he has quite a voice!) When we came back to the car, he was just lying quietly, not at all concerned.
Tristan is also a great walker. Until a couple of days ago, he didn't want to leave the house. He would brace himself against the leash until we turned around to come home. But now he accepts the leash in any direction. Yesterday, we went for what I calculate to be about a mile, and he trotted along beside me the whole way.
And last, Tristan has learned to sit with the big dogs and wait for his supper. That took a lot of self-control because he is one hungry little guy!
Tuesday, December 2, 2008
"LEAVE IT!"
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