Mike
left last Saturday (May 12) to geocache Nevada, leaving Nellie and me at home.
Hallie was here when he left, and we took Nellie and went to the farm for the
weekend. Nellie was happy while Hallie was with us, but then Hallie said
good-bye and left and Nellie commenced to mope big time.
When
an adult human mopes, you can deal with it somehow. “What’s wrong?” you ask. “Was
it something I said (did, didn’t do, spent)?” In my experience, you can even
reason with a child. “Look – Daddy’s gone for a while. Let me show you the
calendar and we’ll count the days until he comes back. Meanwhile, how about
some ice cream? And the next time Daddy calls, you can talk to him.”
But
it’s a real trial when the moper is the dog. You can’t reason with a dog. Nellie
understands certain concepts, such as walk, dinner / food, cookie, lick this
bowl, kennel, brush teeth, and Mike is gone. But she doesn’t understand time
concepts. She judges each moment on its own merits, not altogether a bad thing
until something isn’t right with her world. And things are not right with
Nellie’s world if her master is gone.
But
Nellie does get something out of what I say. “Mike will be home soon,” I said yesterday afternoon “You’ll
hear him coming on his motorcycle. Eeeeeerrooooooow - putta, putta, putta.” And
with that she went to the sliding glass door and stood there watching for quite
some time, but when Mike didn’t show, she begged for a walk. We were just
leaving the house when Mike roared in.
Oh
joy! Oh happiness! All was right in Nellie’s world with Mike’s return. After
the initial excitement she became nonchalant, as if to say, “I knew he’d be
back. What’s the big deal? You humans make way too much of this stuff.” KW
2 comments:
Doggies do miss their masters. Long, long ago when Mom and Dad went to Europe, they left Duff in the care of a neighbor. The neighbor finally had to call us to say that Duff wouldn't eat; hadn't since M&D left. We had no place to keep him at our little trailer (no yard), so John drove brought him up to his apartment (and old building with a nice yard right outside his door) and kept him. It was enough of his family that he began to eat again.
The thing we most want dogs to do is to respect & follow their master, the leader of their pack.
Good dog. Sad dog.
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