Showing posts with label Lessons Learned from the Life of a Princess Dog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lessons Learned from the Life of a Princess Dog. Show all posts

Saturday, April 5, 2008

An Anniversary Contest!


I realized shortly after I got up this morning that today marks five years exactly (it was even on a Saturday) since Bijoux has been gone. In so many ways it doesn't feel like it's been that long but at the same time, so much has happened in my life that it seems longer than five years.

This dog was such a blessing in my life, and I think about her often. I am so very glad that I wrote the book, that I had that year of working closely with my sister on its design, and that the finished product is not only something that I'm proud of but that it is a great lasting memorial to this beautiful animal.

I thought that today would be a great time to do a couple of things. One is, I finally organized the blog entries of my essay collection, "Lessons Learned from the Life of a Princess Dog" so they would be easily accessible to everyone who visits this blog. You can click on any or all of them down there in the margin.

Also, in honor of this anniversary, I decided to give away three copies of my book. All you have to do to enter is leave a comment here, telling a short story about a late, great pet who impacted your life. Think of it as creating your own little memorial, right here!

The contest will run through next Saturday, April 12 at 11:59 p.m. I will use a random number generator to choose the winners! Please leave your e-mail address with your comment so I don't have to chase you around if you win.

I hope that, in stopping in here and entering the contest, you will also read some of what I have posted here. Please keep my book in mind, and I'd also appreciate it if you can spread the word about it! Thanks so much!

Now, read...and enter! I look forward to reading all of your stories!

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Open Heart, Open Mind

Lesson Number 17: A Faint Heart Never a True Love Knows

I soon found that although Bijoux can never be replaced, I longed to have another dog in the house. Jim said that he always expected that I would have a change in heart: I’m too much of a “dog person”. The idea of bringing another dog into our family didn’t thrill him, and until we discussed it more I definitely didn’t want to say anything to the kids. Jim reminded me that he hadn’t been very excited about bringing Bijoux home, but he loved her after we took the plunge. After much discussion, Jim told me that my desire to get another dog was much greater than his desire not to get one, and he was sure that, as it was with Bijoux, he would enjoy a new dog as well. There just had to be some rules:

• No sleeping in our bed
• No jumping on the furniture
• No people food
• No getting a new dog until my book about Bijoux was complete

Of course, more rules could be negotiated as time went on. I was so happy that Jim was willing to go forward with this. The kids had been telling me that they missed Bijoux and wanted to get another dog. Jason even asked for a bird. I reminded them that Bijoux couldn’t be replaced, and that we would get another dog someday, but I had a book to finish, first. Jim and I wanted to give us all enough time and space from April 5, 2003 to be able to enjoy a new puppy, and now—over one year later—I am very glad that we did it this way.

As I did with Bijoux, I came up with a name for our new, soon-to-be-coming-home puppy without having seen her first. Her name will be Roxie. Of course, there is a story behind her name. About one month after Bijoux’s death, I took Dylan and several other fifth graders to the Humane Society. The fifth graders collected needed supplies for the HS as a community service project. Our group delivered the donations, and I asked the woman who worked there if we could have a tour. She obliged, and took us right over to the “cat room”. Not being a “cat person”, I wasn’t thrilled. I asked about dogs, and she said, “Sure, I’ll show you where the dogs are, but we only have one that’s available right now.” We followed her into the room across the hall and took a look at Jake, an adorable black mutt. As the kids were talking to Jake (and Dylan was commanding him to “Sit!”), I ventured to the other end of the room, where there was, indeed, another dog. I didn’t recognize the type of dog, but she was so sweet. I looked at the tag on her cage, and was pleasantly surprised. Her name was “Roxie”, and she was a Beagle/German Shepherd mix. (I took this as another sign from Bijoux, by the way!) I thought Roxie would be a perfect name for a new puppy: I liked that both Roxie and Bijoux had an “X”, and this sign at the Humane Society came in to me loud and clear.

I told Jim about my experience, and he humored me. Sitting around the dinner table some months later, I was telling the kids how we would name our new dog Roxie. Dylan lobbied to get the name changed to “Jakeina”, because he was stuck on little Jake at the Humane Society, but I told him no. Out of the blue, Jim said, “I know what her middle name should be: Susie.” I was so touched by this that my eyes started to tear up.

And so we switched gears and got mentally ready for Roxie Susie Wells. I am ready to take the leap. Open heart, open arms, welcoming a new relationship. It’s the biggest lesson that I truly learned from Bijoux, the Original Princess Dog.

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Looking For Her Everywhere; Finding Her in My Heart

Lesson Number Sixteen: There is Life After Death, If You Believe

The first thing I did after she died was put together a little photo album. I spent an entire evening digging through many of our family pictures from the thirteen years before and pulled out many photos of Bijoux. There were photos from her first night home, including my favorite one of her laying on top of Jim. He was on his back on our kitchen floor, and she was sprawled out on him, her paws towards his face. She was looking at me (I took the picture while I was laying on the floor also, but I was at Jim’s head, looking at Bijoux straight on) while she had a knotted-up sock hanging out of her mouth. Not only do I love the photo just because of how cute she looked, but it was also quite colorful, as Jim was wearing a red, white, and blue t-shirt that we purchased during the INXS “Kick” concert tour very recently.



The other pictures that "begged" to be included were some from Bijoux’s first birthday party, a photo of Bijoux standing (all four legs) on top of an end table in the living room, a picture of the toddler Dylan kissing her, and of course, the pictures from the day before her death. This photo album did make me cry, but it also made me laugh.

As I looked at her “super-sized” light blue water dish, I couldn’t figure out what to do with it. It was made of a heavy duty plastic, and seemed such a substantial thing to throw away, but I couldn’t imagine that I would be able to find anyone who’d want it, either. To pack it away in a box would be equally unreasonable. After some thought, I finally decided that I would plant some flowers in it. It was a nice way to recycle and remember at the same time!

The other activity I chose to engage in was writing a book about Bijoux. I learned so much from this little animal—there was so much give and take—that I felt I could honor her by writing about her.

Over the next week, I used a regular notebook to jot down a phrase that would jog my memory about every single thing I could remember about Bijoux. Although the initial purpose for writing everything down was the book, the act of making all of these notes actually helped my state of mind in a major way. When I finished writing everything I could, I felt enormously better.

On Friday, six days after Bijoux’s death, I left the house at 4:30 a.m. as usual, to teach my spin class. Driving down I-88, I was singing along with a song on the radio. A commercial followed, and I switched station. I was thrilled to hear a song that I hadn’t heard in a very, very long time. Suddenly, as I sang along, it occurred to me that it was “What You Need” by INXS, the group which we had seen in concert just before we brought Bijoux home—the group whose shirt Jim was wearing in that favorite photo of mine. I knew the song well, but felt as if I was hearing the lyrics for the very first time that morning. The words (copyright INXS) brought me to tears:

"Hey, here is the story
Forget about the trouble in life
Don't you know, it's not easy
When you gotta walk upon that line

That's why - You need
That's why - This is what you need
I'll give you what you need

Don't you get sad and lonely
You need a change from
What you do all day
Ain't no sense in all your crying
Just pick it up and throw it into shape

Hey you, won't you listen
This is not the end of it all
Don't you see there is a rhythm
I'll take you where you
Really need to be"



I find that there are two types of people in the world: people who believe that things happen for a reason, and people who deny any sense of mysticism or fate—they claim that whatever has mysteriously occurred is “strictly coincidence”. When I was younger, I would have belonged in the second group of people. However, as I have experienced more and more of life, my beliefs tend to fall into the former category. Depending upon which camp you’re in and how badly you like to argue about the ways of the world, this is where it could be possible to find comfort.

As I went through my day that Friday, completely excited because I felt as if I “got a sign” from Bijoux saying that she was okay, about half of the people I reported this to looked at me like I was completely nuts. I didn’t care, though: I felt so good. In order to recover from the grief I was experiencing, I grasped at anything that could be taken as a sign from Bijoux. Strangely, after not hearing “What You Need” on the radio for so long—perhaps years, or had I just not noticed it? —I heard it many times over the next two to three weeks.

One particularly spooky experience happened on a day when I was driving my car around a Naperville neighborhood, with a co-worker in the front passenger seat and Dylan and Jason in the back seat (school had let out for the day). We were distributing flyers for work and spent about an hour driving through residential areas that were close to the health club.

We turned a corner onto a new street, and noticed that there was a beagle whose leash was tied up in front of the second house on the right. The dog was adorable, and sleeping. Just as we drove by, his eyes popped open and he sat up, wagging his tail as he stared at us. A few minutes after that, “What You Need” came on the radio. We had to turn around eventually and pass the beagle’s house again, and when we did, he was still sitting there wagging his tail at us. Dylan and Jason got a kick out of this, and always listened for “Bijoux’s song” on the radio; I think it made them feel better, too.

Time heals all, they say, and something happened that I never dreamed would. I always said that I would never get another dog. After I spent the last several years of Bijoux’s life being on edge about her eventual death, and then actually going through those painful last months, weeks, days, hours, and minutes, I didn’t want to put my heart and soul “out there” for another dog. But another major wave of change was on its way.

Friday, January 25, 2008

The Toughest Decision, Ever.

Lesson Number Fifteen: If You Love Someone, Set Them Free part three

In the first week of April 2003, Bijoux’s rapid breathing was happening even when she was sleeping. We decided that the following Saturday—April 5—would be the day that we would have her put down. It was the day I had been dreading for years.

When we made that decision, we also decided not to tell Dylan and Jason what was going to happen until it got closer. It was a rough week. On Friday, I loaded the camera with film before the kids got home from school. After they put their backpacks down and got settled, I suggested that we take some pictures with Bijoux. Though it was very difficult, I am so happy that we did it. I kept telling myself how lucky we were to have this opportunity. I took several pictures of Dylan and Jason sitting next to Bijoux on that Pottery Barn rug, which was the perfect accessory for the photos. Dylan told me that he really didn’t feel like smiling, and I told him that it was okay, he didn’t have to. It was just heartbreaking.

After I took the shots I wanted, Dylan told me he wanted to take one of me with Bjioux. I got down onto the rug and laid down behind her, wrapping my arm around her and pulling her face toward mine. Dylan snapped the picture, and then another one. I took the camera from him and finished the roll that day, so that I could take the film to be developed immediately.

That evening when Jim got home, we wanted to tell the kids what was going on right away, so that it wouldn’t be too close to bedtime when they heard the news. We sat them down again and told them that we would be taking Bijoux to the vet the next day and that she wouldn’t be returning home with us. We told them in very vague terms what was going to happen. They were, understandably, sad, but it was a lot for them to try at their young ages to comprehend.

The next day, Saturday April 5, I was scheduled to teach my 7:15 spin class and then to work. It was all I could do to get through the workout and then work at my desk in the membership department quietly for the morning. Naturally my thoughts were elsewhere, and I was exhausted from not sleeping much. Julie and my parents were coming to say goodbye to Bijoux, and I wanted to spend some time alone with her as well, so I left work around noon.

Jim was working in the garage when I arrived. I entered the house and Bijoux was, as usual, on the family room couch. She was completely covered by her blankets and was sleeping peacefully, but was happy to see me when I greeted her. I went upstairs to change clothes and returned to her. I sprawled out on the couch, and she curled up with me. I petted her as I cried quietly, wondering how I was going to get through this. At one point, she shifted her body and rested her head on my chest, gazing into my eyes. I told myself I would never forget the coarse feeling of her fur, the shape of her head, and the way she fit her body to the shape of mine. Jim and the kids came in and out of the room, but mostly left me just to be with her.

A short time later, Mom, Dad, and Julie arrived. It was close to the time Jim and I had to leave to get to the Animal Hospital before closing. I wanted to stretch out my time with her as much as possible. When we couldn’t hang around anymore, I got up to get Bijoux’s collar, which she hadn’t worn in a couple of months because she had a fatty tumor on the front of her neck and I hadn’t wanted it to get irritated. As I was retrieving her collar and her leash, my parents and Julie said a brief good-bye. I felt as if I were in a total fog as I walked over towards her. As I kneeled down on the floor next to her, I leaned over to put her collar on, and let out a cry as I fastened it around her neck. I buried my face into her body and just hugged her, and I heard my Mom telling the boys, “It’s okay…”

I stood up and when Bijoux saw the leash, she did jump up, just like Dr. Staudacher predicted she might. My parents told Dylan and Jason that they needed to say goodbye to Bijoux, and they each did so quickly, with a little kiss and hug.

I felt completely wretched as I walked her out to the car. She was so excited to be “going for a walk”, and here I was, taking her to die. I’m not sure that I have ever felt that guilty in my life, although deep down I knew we were doing the right thing.

Jim had set up her blue blanket on the back seat of the car. When I saw it I knew he meant well, but I thought to myself, “He’s got to be kidding!” There was no way I would not hold her on my lap! I grabbed the blanket from the back seat and sat down in the front passenger’s seat, where I held Bijoux for one of the longest fifteen minute drives I’ve ever experienced.

Jim didn’t say much; I’m sure he didn’t know what to say to me. He just kept his hand on mine when he could, and petted Bijoux every now and then. I knew he was hurting too, and I felt bad that I couldn’t comfort him like he was comforting me. He asked me if I was sure that I wanted to go into the exam room with her; he knew it would be very, very difficult to take. I told him that after all of the joy Bijoux gave to me, after all of the unconditional love, I felt that it was absolutely the least I could do to be there for her until the very end. I told him that he didn’t have to go in with us if he didn’t want to, but he told me that he wanted to be there for me.

When we were a couple of minutes away from the vet, Jim called to let them know we were on our way. We walked right up to the counter and I filled out the paperwork, indicating that we didn’t want to take her home with us afterwards. I paid for the procedure, and the receptionist led us into an exam room immediately.
We sat on the floor with Bijoux, stroking her and crying. I still hadn’t quite figured out exactly how I was going to get through this, but I knew that it would all be okay.

In just a few minutes, Dr. Grant entered the room. She greeted us, and asked if we would like a bit more time before she got started. We both answered no, dreading the procedure but wanting it over with all at the same time. Dr. Grant explained what would happen, and I found her manner and her voice to be so completely gentle and soothing. I was so thankful that she spoke slowly, making sure that we understood everything. She asked if we had any questions, and when we didn’t, she left the room briefly to get what she needed.

When she returned, she also brought another woman with her. This woman was a technician who would help hold Bijoux for the procedure. She lifted Bijoux onto the table, stood her up, and held her against her chest. As Dr. Grant prepared her paw for the injection, Jim and I stood at Bijoux’s head, talking to her and petting her.

Dr. Grant gave her the first injection and we waited for something to happen. Bijoux seemed to relax just a bit. Dr. Grant said that she would have to give her another one, and as she made her preparations, I continued talking to Bijoux. She just looked a little woozy to me, and she didn’t take her eyes off of me the entire time.

Dr. Grant gave her the second injection, and within a second or two, Bijoux’s legs completely relaxed and her body sank down onto the table. The technician eased her into a natural position while Dr. Grant pulled out her stethoscope. She checked Bijoux’s heartbeat and said that she was almost gone, but that she would give her a third injection after we left. Jim asked her to do it while we were there, and I am thankful that he thought of that. Dr. Grant said, “Oh, of course.”

She injected Bijoux one last time and this time when she checked, found no heartbeat. She told us that Bijoux was gone. I asked her if Dr. Staudacher was in the building, and she said that he was. I asked her to please tell him that we had been in, and to thank him for me; that his advice really helped me feel better. She smiled and said she would pass on the message.

Jim and I turned to leave, and I kissed Bijoux on the forehead one last time. I picked up her collar and leash, and we left the exam room for the last time. I was grateful that we had taken care of all of the paperwork ahead of time as we walked out into the bright sunshine of the day as quickly as we could go, to get out of there.

We were stunned and quiet on the way home. We kept telling ourselves that we had done the right thing, but everything felt so strange. Everyone was still at the house when we got there, and Mom, Julie and I went out to the store. It was nice to have a diversion.

After they all went home that evening, I started gathering up Bijoux’s things. I put her food and water dishes on the kitchen desk and rolled her leash and collar together, placing them in one of the dishes. I threw away her dog treats. I put her bed aside, as I planned to pass it on to Minnie.

That afternoon, I dropped Friday’s film off at Walgreens for One-Hour developing. When I returned to pick them up, I was pleasantly surprised to find that so many of the photos we took turned out great. My favorite shot was one that Dylan took of Bijoux and me. I am laying behind her with one arm draped over her back and under her front paw. Her face is against mine. She’s looking off to the side, and I am looking at the camera, just barely smiling.



A picture is worth a thousand words, and although I can tell now how obvious her state of health was at the time, looking at this photograph causes so many memories to come flooding back to me. Bijoux was truly one of the blessings of my life.

It seemed as though for several days I couldn’t stop crying. Every little thing made me cry:
• when I dropped food on the floor and she didn’t come running to clean it up for me
• when I returned home and didn’t see her laying on the couch
• when I left home and didn’t see her little head peering out the living room window at me, just waiting for her chance to jump on the good couch
• when I went to bed and she wasn’t in the room
• when I looked through the window into the backyard, knowing that she’d never walk through my flower beds again
• when I went to use the bathroom and didn’t hear her nose try to push the door open
• when I looked at pictures of her—puppy pictures and “old lady” pictures

I needed some sort of plan to deal with my grief, even though I knew that what I was experiencing was normal. I felt horrible much of the time. I had an intense need to turn all of the negatives into positives. A flood of healing was about to take place, and I was the one who could make it happen.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

The Most Difficult of Preparations

Lesson Number Fifteen: If You Love Someone, Set Them Free part two

Jim and I discussed what we would tell Dylan and Jason. We wanted, as always, to be honest with them but we didn’t want to scare them either. Amazingly, although Jason had been with me for most of the experience, he seemed to not have any idea that anything was amiss. We sat them down in the kitchen and spoke to them slowly and deliberately. Jim did most of the talking, which was a relief to me. He told them that when we took Bijoux to be checked, we were told that she is very sick. He said that although she didn’t seem sick to us right now because she was acting very normally for her, her health was gradually going to get worse and then eventually she was going to die.

Dylan asked how long it would be. Jim told him that we didn’t know, that the kind of illness she had didn’t have any kind of clock on it: it could be two weeks, two months, or even a year. The most important thing for us to remember right now, we explained, is that this was truly a piece of good fortune that we can do our best to make her as comfortable as possible, and to enjoy having her around while we still can.

We asked if they had any questions, and they both said no. They got up from the kitchen stools and went right to Bijoux. They spent a few minutes with her and then went on to something else. Looking back, I believe that telling them the information that we did was the best thing to do. In a way, we gave them a little gift: the ability to try and prepare for the inevitable—as much as children can prepare for something they’ve never experienced.

Life went on as normally as possible for the next couple of weeks. We gated Bijoux in the family room for a couple of days, but as she kept jumping up to the couch and on to the floor, I took the gate down. If she seemed fine jumping the distance from the floor to the couch, then the stairs were probably a piece of cake. I reasoned that I wanted her to be able to do whatever (within reason) she wanted to do at this stage of her life. In fact, I used that reasoning quite often over the next two months. Had it been before that dreaded day of discovery, Jim would have complained that I was giving in to her every whim and I needed not to spoil her so much. Now though, he just silently shook his head, letting me do what I needed to do to make her happy, because he knew that it made me happy. I ran out to Petsmart and purchased a puffy, foam-filled bed for Bijoux, which I placed on the other side of the bed, away from the outside wall.

After a while, the Senior dog food I had been feeding Bijoux was being left untouched. I couldn’t stand the thought of her starving, so I began cooking for her. I made combinations of rice, chicken, and scrambled eggs for her twice daily. Sometimes I tossed some cheddar cheese in the mix. To make things more efficient, I cooked enough rice and chicken at one time to last three or four days, and just warmed it slightly when I fed her. Jim thought I was completely nuts, but again didn’t say a word.

At first, Bijoux became very excited about her new diet. I tried to stir some of the canned dog food in with my concoctions, but she picked around it. Eventually I didn’t even attempt it.

As time went on, Bijoux had less and less of an appetite. I begged her to eat. I occasionally tried to feed her out of my hand, but she didn’t want to eat. Eventually she would only eat a little bit of what I made for her every other day, but I still continued to cook. She was losing weight, and I knew it wouldn’t be long.

One day, I “borrowed” Minnie. I thought that a visit might be good for Bijoux’s spirits. I was happy when Bijoux perked up at the sight of her friend. They didn’t play together like they used to, but it was clear to me that Bijoux had a good day. Minnie alternated between playing with us and taking breaks near Bijoux.

Almost two months after her diagnosis, we noticed that Bijoux seemed to be breathing differently. It wasn’t a completely conspicuous change, but every now and then the speed of her breathing would accelerate. Jim and I had several discussions about our plan, constantly reassessing how long we should wait before taking her in. What we wanted most was for her to leave this world without having been in pain: a tough thing for two reasonable and intelligent humans to judge.

I called the Naperville Animal Hospital to get some advice. I spoke with Dr. Staudacher, who was very thoughtful and caring in conversation. He told me that he had seen many pet owners drag things out for their own good, not putting much real consideration into the well-being of their beloved pet. He told me to watch for signs that Bijoux’s quality of life was decreased: little appetite and little physical activity were some of the first signs of things to come. As he spoke with empathy, he told me what we already knew: that it was our decision to make.

I asked him what happened once we made the decision. He told me that we would bring her to the vet and fill out some forms. There were a couple of options: we could have her cremated alone so that we could put her remains in a container, we could bring her body home with us for our own burial, or we could have her cremated in a group of other animals. Dr. Staudacher said that we would pay for the procedure, whichever one we chose, before we went into the exam room so that we could just leave afterwards. She would be given an injection that was really a strong sedative. The strength of the injection (and some animals, he said, needed more than one) quickly shuts down the organs. He told me that it happens in a matter of seconds and that she wouldn’t feel anything.

Dr. Staudacher also told me that I shouldn’t be surprised if Bijoux suddenly perked up for the trip to the vet. He said that was completely normal. I dreaded it.

I expressed concern that we would get there after this long and emotional road, and one of the doctors would say, “She’s not ready yet.” He emphatically denied that this would happen, saying that our decision would be honored, no matter what. I felt so much better, and so much more at peace with everything after I hung up the phone. I shared the information with Jim, and I think he felt a little better, too.

Click here for part 3!

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

The Beginning of the End

Lesson Number Fifteen: If You Love Someone, Set Them Free

I spent Bijoux’s last few years dreading her death, when overall she was quite healthy. I didn’t dwell on these feelings of doom for long periods of time; they just popped up out of the blue and then disappeared like rain clouds. I did my best to treat these feelings as a reminder that I needed to enjoy Bijoux as much as possible while I could. That she would eventually, as all living things do, die was always in the back of my head; how I would handle it was a very scary thought. I couldn’t even begin to imagine how painful it would be.

The beginning of the end was in the fall of the year 2002. Bijoux suddenly didn’t seem to have much of an appetite. My sense of dread started to rise, and after a couple of days, I decided to call Dr. Heflin to ask her if she thought I should bring Bijoux in to see her. The receptionist who answered the phone told me that Dr. Heflin had recently retired and moved to the South. I was completely blown away by the news. I was so happy for her, because she seemed to spend most of her waking hours at the hospital, but personally I was devastated. I selfishly imagined that she’d always be there, always available to us, and that her involvement with us would help me deal with Bijoux’s eventual death because I trusted her so completely. I felt like a child with these feelings, and resolved to concentrate on how happy Dr. Heflin probably was, now that she moved on to something else in her life.

I grudgingly left my contact information to be passed on, and another doctor returned my phone call later in the day. The doctor—who was extremely kind, soothing, and helpful, qualities I shouldn’t have been surprised about because he worked in the same environment that Dr. Heflin had—told me that Bijoux’s lack of desire at mealtime could be a dental issue. Older dogs, he said, sometimes had pain in their teeth when chewing on the hard food that I had always given her. He suggested that I switch her gradually over to a soft food for “Senior” dogs, so off to Petsmart we went!

After switching Bijoux’s food, she seemed to work up excitement for meals again. For the next couple of months, she ate her food almost every time I put it down for her. I chalked the problem up to the sensitivity in her teeth, as the doctor suggested. I felt good about things again. Jim and I, however, also began to notice that Bijoux’s activity level had decreased a great deal. She slept for many hours during the day, and was ready to go to bed earlier than ever. My tendency to retreat into denial was the norm when it came to the prospect of Bijoux’s deteriorating health.

Sometime during this period, we purchased a new, king-sized bed. Upon its delivery, we discovered that the top of the mattress was approximately six to eight inches higher than the old waterbed we discarded. It would be impossible for her to jump up onto the bed herself, and it was too risky, we decided, to assist her in getting up. Recently she had started to get up in the middle of the night, needing to go out. We were concerned that she would jump off of the bed and break a leg. We made the tough decision to make Bijoux a little bed of blankets on the floor.

One Saturday in February of 2003, Jim and Dylan were at a Scout activity of some sort. Jason was with me, at work. I planned to leave work early and take Jason to Julie’s apartment for a quick visit, and then possibly see a movie with him. It would be a long day for Bijoux to be home alone, but I figured that we could get into an early show and get home for her, and she’d be fine.

One of the girls who worked in the childcare area called my extension to tell me that Jason had a headache and felt somewhat warm. Our afternoon plans were thwarted, but in the end I was glad. I called Julie to tell her that we wouldn’t be visiting her after all, and we left to go home. On the way home we went through the McDonalds drive-thru.

We entered the house and I called to Bijoux. The house was eerily quiet, but I knew Bijoux would appear before us momentarily, when she smelled the food. She had taken to occasionally sleeping upstairs in the bedroom, in her nest of blankets. Jason and I set up our lunch in the family room so we could eat while watching television. As we began to eat, I became worried. We had been home, McDonalds in hand, for about three minutes and Bijoux was nowhere to be found. I whistled for her, and when she didn’t respond I ran up the stairs, growing more afraid by the second.

I rounded the corner into our bedroom and went to the far side of the bed where she was laying on her blankets. She looked like she had just woken up from a long nap, but seemed happy to see me. I petted her and said, “Come on! French fries!”

Assuming she would get up and follow me, I bounded back down the stairs. I listened carefully, trying to hear the click-click-click of her nails on the hardwood floor. Nothing. Finally I heard her walking, and I sat back down on the couch. She slowly made her way down to the kitchen, and sat down at the top of the stairs to the family room. At that time I had no idea what a hard time she had, getting down those first seven steps to the main level of the house.

I started to become truly alarmed when she wouldn’t proceed down the final seven steps to the family room to claim the French fry I held out for her. I called her name, trying to coax her down. She finally came down the stairs and lay down on the carpet in the middle of the room. I couldn’t get her to get up, not even for that stupid French fry. In one of my biggest ever shows of problem avoidance, I called the Animal Hospital for some advice. My panic, mixed with denial, temporarily paralyzed my judgment and I needed someone to tell me that I should get her there as soon as possible. I actually asked the receptionist, “Do you think I should get her in there today?” Naturally she suggested that an office visit would be the most prudent thing at this point.

I called Julie, praying that I would be able to get in touch with her, and asked her to meet me at the vet, so that Jason would be taken care of. I told Jason to get in the car with his lunch as I wrapped Bijoux in a blanket and carried her, because she wouldn’t walk, out to the garage. After settling her in the passenger seat, we took off for the vet.

That Saturday was one of the busiest days I had ever seen at the vet. There were people and animals everywhere in the lobby, sitting on every bench and standing in every corner of the room. The line at the reception desk had two or three people in it, waiting to be helped. I carried my 40-something-pound dog in and got in line. I tried not to be impatient while everyone behind the desk seemed to be moving in slow motion. Bijoux was getting heavy, but I couldn’t put her down.

Julie arrived shortly, and as I finally got to the front of the line and got Bijoux’s name on the waiting list, she took Jason to a vacant bench. I joined them, cuddling Bijoux on my lap. Julie spoke to her and petted her, kissing her on the forehead. I felt as if I would explode as my anxiety reached peak after peak, and still we had to wait. The minutes seemed like hours. I alternated between tearing up and pulling it together. Julie kept trying to reassure me that everything was going to be okay, and I kept trying to believe her. She will never know how much I appreciate her presence and strength that day.

Since the wait seemed endless, Julie took Jason to Portillo’s (a hot dog place). Left alone with Bijoux, I cuddled her and looked around at the other people who were waiting. It seemed to me that most of them had brought brand-new little puppies to get their booster shots. In my panic, I felt extremely paranoid, like all of the puppy owners were staring at me with my old, precious dog. I felt hostile, and would have given anything to be allowed into a patient room ahead of all of those puppy owners. I missed Dr. Heflin terribly.

Finally, Bijoux’s name was called. I carefully picked her up and took her into the designated patient room. I put her, blankets and all, on the exam table. A young doctor entered the room shortly after we did. I didn’t remember ever noticing him during our previous visits. He was very pleasant and wrote down everything I told him about Bijoux’s behavior.

His first concern was for Bijoux’s back. The fact that she had so much trouble walking—and then refused to walk at all—made him worry that she pinched a nerve or slipped a disc. He said that his preferred course of action was to take x-rays and a shot of an anti-inflammatory drug. I gave him permission, and he carried Bijoux out of the room to go ahead with the procedures. While they were gone, I struggled with what we would do if she had a major back injury.

The last surgery she had, after her knee surgery, was to remove some fatty tumors that Dr. Heflin said were quite normal in older dogs. In the time after those first fatty tumors were removed, many more grew, including one on her hip that became almost as big as a golf ball. Dr. Heflin recommended that at her advanced age, Bijoux shouldn’t go through that surgery again unless it seemed to us that the tumors were causing her pain. Jim and I had discussed this kind of thing at length, and we agreed that she was getting too old to go through surgery after surgery anyway. At some point we would have to let her go.

After about twenty minutes, the doctor returned. He walked in hesitantly and didn’t make eye contact right away. I could tell that there was something wrong. He had the x-rays with him and said, “I want to show you Bijoux’s films.” As he put the films on the wall viewer, he said, “I took a couple of pictures from different angles and I found nothing wrong with her back.” I said, “That’s great, right? But what’s wrong?” He flicked the light on so we could look at the x-rays and said, “I found something else.” I looked at the film and my heart sank into my stomach. Bijoux’s lungs, as the doctor pointed out, were about 1/3 full of little circles, tumors of some kind.

I started to cry again. “What are we supposed to do now???” I asked him. I was living one of my biggest nightmares. He said that if we wanted to, they could do some exploratory surgery, but considering the fact that she had just turned thirteen, the surgery and her recovery could have complications and it was important for us to weigh everything when making our decision. I told him that Jim and I had already discussed what we would do in a situation like this, and that wouldn’t be an option anyway. I asked him what we could do for her, for the time being.

He told me that even though he didn’t see anything wrong with her back on the x-ray, he gave her the anti-inflammatory injection anyway. He suggested that we keep her on one floor of the house from now on: no more stairs. He looked me in the eyes and told me that it was time to just make her as comfortable as possible. Try to keep her eating and drinking, and give her lots of love, he said. He told me that eventually she would probably begin to have breathing trouble, and to watch out for that. I thanked him and headed out to the lobby, where Julie and Jason were waiting for me. I told Julie what had happened, and at that moment her cell phone rang. It was Jim, on his way home from Scouts. I filled him in and told him I’d see him at home soon. I went to the reception desk to pay for the visit, and waited for Bijoux to be brought out to me.

I had quite a shock when I heard the door to the back room open. I turned around, and Bijoux came bounding out, using her own four legs to come to me. She wagged her tail and when I kneeled down she licked me and nudged me, ready to go home. This was completely beyond my realm of comprehension, how I brought her to the vet completely unable to walk, and now, two hours later, was walking her to the car on the other end of her leash.

On the way home, Bijoux settled herself in the blanket on the passenger’s seat just as she always did, and napped on the way home. When I parked the car in the garage and opened her door, she hopped down and trotted inside the house. For me, this was all way too much for one day. As I sat in the family room petting her, I tried to digest everything and attempted to come up with some kind of explanation for what had happened; why she had to be carried into the vet but jogged out to the car.

The only plausible conclusion I reached was that her little nest of blankets that was on the floor next to our bed was on the outside wall of the house. It was the middle of a cold winter, and perhaps sleeping for who-knows-how-long next to that wall made her very stiff. By the time we were finished at the vet, she would have warmed up and had little to no trouble moving.

Another wrench in the day was discovered when I went upstairs towards the bedroom: Bijoux had vomited on the Pottery Barn rug in the living room. I assumed that she had been sleeping on the living room couch while I was working, and—God love her—she hopped down when she felt sick. It must have been after that when she retired to the bedroom.

I kept running the day through my head over and over again, and decided that the only thing I knew for sure, without a doubt, was that the chain of events that led to the discovery of the tumors in her lungs was meant to happen for a reason. Had Jason not felt warm, had we not purchased McDonald’s French fries, had we not come home early to find that Bijoux couldn’t walk, had she not (probably) been too stiff to walk…we never would have taken her to be checked and we wouldn’t have found out at that time that she was ill. Although the news had been very upsetting to us, we chose to take it all in as a blessing. Our time with Bijoux was now very limited, but we felt lucky that we had a bit of a warning.

Click here for part 2!

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Sadness Warning

I wanted to let my blog readers know that the next "Lesson" from my essay collection is the sad one. It is also very long (15 pages in Microsoft Word!) and covers a few months' time. When I wrote it, I just "spewed" the experience and didn't want to divide it up to make it shorter. Now that I am posting the essays online,I know that posting 15 pages in one day is a bit ridiculous so I will tell you that although I will divide it, I will make sure to post the next parts each day after the one before so it's not like I'm trying to cause some kind of cliffhanger.

I have had mixed feelings about getting to this point in my posting of the essays. While it makes me terribly sad to relive it on paper, I want to share it with everyone too because I think it's yet another part of the grieving process, though a small one.

So, that's what I'll do: the first part of Lesson 15 goes up tomorrow morning.

xoxo!

Vets are the Best!

Lesson Number Fourteen: Always Get The Best Care For Those You Love

We had been gradually treated to clues of Bijoux’s neuroticism early on in her puppyhood. In fact, these little episodes—such as jumping the baby gate, pooping in front of the box fan, only eating certain flavors of Milk Bones—were merely a warm-up from the Big Daddy of all neuroses. And it only cost us $775 in veterinary bills (almost two months rent at the time) to make the discovery.

In December of 1990, Jim, on the U.S.S. Theodore Roosevelt, left on a six-month cruise, heading towards the trouble zone in the Middle East. It was quite a stressful time, as the threat of war loomed on the horizon, and Jim was supposed to be released from the ship to shore duty in Great Lakes Illinois in May of 1991. Shortly after he departed, I began my final semester at Old Dominion University, a semester in which I would be consumed with the duties of full-time student teaching, along with keeping my evening job at Leewards Craft Store.

So that's how it went: he was in the Middle East, and I was teaching and working almost every waking moment. Bijoux became very sick. She was vomiting constantly, and having diarrhea constantly. She didn't want to eat, and she was getting skinnier and skinnier. I had her in and out of the vet's office several times: they even kept her there for a 3-day period and then, less than a week later, a 4-day period. Blood work was done, and the University of Virginia (where Dr. Fisher sent it) couldn't find a darn thing wrong with her.

Dr. Fisher had a theory: She was lonely. Wha??? It made sense on a logical level I supposed, but could a dog really get that sick from a period of loneliness? The proof that Dr. Fisher—bless his soul—was right came to us in the second week of May. Within that one whirlwind week, Jim flew home from the Persian Gulf, I completed my student teaching assignment, quit my job at Leewards, and graduated from Old Dominion University. Within days, we moved north so Jim could begin his shore duty assignment at Great Lakes. Like magic, Bijoux was completely “healed”. She became the normally digesting, playful puppy we had grown to know and love.

Another veterinarian made an indelible mark on our family, starting when we moved to Illinois. A neighbor referred me to the Animal Hospital that was less than two miles from the house. It was a group of doctors much like a family practice; each time we took Bijoux in for a visit, we never knew which doctor would come through the door. Since her illness as a puppy, Bijoux was always frightened on a visit to the vet. Upon arrival, she trembled and shed hair in bunches. She often hopped up to sit on my lap in the lobby (or even on the bench next to me, like a real person!), and when we were shown to a patient room, she would either hide under my legs if I sat on the bench, or she would press her shaking body against mine if I joined her on the floor. She absolutely hated being placed on the exam table and constantly sought a way to try to jump past us to the floor. The doctors were all great with her, but one day we found our favorite.

Dr. Dena Heflin entered the patient room, where Bijoux and I sat on the floor waiting. She greeted us, smiling, and as I shook her hand I explained Bijoux’s nervousness. Dr. Heflin said, “Oh, that’s okay! I’ll just check her out here on the floor!” With that, she plopped down onto the floor next to us, and spent a couple of minutes just talking sweetly to Bijoux and petting her, trying to make her feel as comfortable as possible. Bijoux responded by gradually wagging her tail and eventually licking the doctor’s face. I was amazed, and speechless. Dr. Heflin then examined her slowly and carefully, speaking to her as she worked.

Her kindness and consideration for this animal so impressed me that I requested Dr. Heflin each time Bijoux needed shots or had some medical problem that needed to be checked out. I always called the vet to make sure she was working on the day I wanted to bring Bijoux in, and if she was not scheduled to work that day or had surgeries to perform, I changed my schedule to make sure that we could meet with her.

For nearly the last seven years of her life, Bijoux was examined on the floor by Dr. Heflin. Dr. Heflin diagnosed Bijoux’s allergies, performed her knee surgery, removed a “fatty tumor” from her hip, and kept a close eye on other “fatty tumors” that popped up as Bijoux advanced in age. We breathed a big sigh of relief together when a battery of tests showed that Bijoux’s sudden (over a four month period) eight-pound weight loss turned out to be the result of a regular exercise “routine”: playing with her new friend Minnie. Dr. Heflin easily made herself available to speak to me by phone when I just had a quick question, and she always knew exactly how to reassure me when there were problems. Her cheerful greeting of "Hey Bij!" is a sound byte that is still in my head to this day.

As Bijoux got older, I began dreading her eventual death. I wasn’t obsessed hour-by-hour with the idea, however I thought about it now and then and although I was a mature adult who knew the life cycle, I became upset at the mere thought of losing her. One of the thoughts that I was able to comfort myself with was that at least when something happened to Bijoux, she would be in great hands with Dr. Heflin.

Monday, January 21, 2008

One For You...a Whole Bag For Me!

Lesson Number Thirteen: You Are What You Eat

Bijoux, like most beagles I’ve ever met or even read about in books, was a connoisseur of people food. She’d do anything to get it. Of course I knew, from my experience with dogs and from reviewing the rules by reading Superpuppy, that giving people food to our dog was a big no-no, but every now and then we felt extra benevolent. Unfortunately, once a dog gets her mouth around a couple of items from the people’s food category, it’s hard to discontinue the practice of treating her. That’s why she was great at suckering me into sharing my toast, popcorn, rice, Popsicles, cheese, and all of those other favorites of hers.

Then there’s the fact that when it comes to people food, dogs generally don’t have the desire, discipline, or self-control to back off when temptation smacks them right in the face. That’s why Bijoux temporarily turned herself into the equivalent of a doublewide trailer by eating that entire loaf of wheat bread at one standing. Unfortunately, that day was no big deal compared to one particular day in 2001, in the middle of October.

Upon returning home from work, Bijoux greeted me in her normal way as I walked into the house. I took a couple minutes to pet her and talk to her, and then I put my purse down in the family room. I walked up the seven steps to the kitchen so I could check the answering machine, and noticed a plastic bag on the floor. Not thinking much about it at that moment, I picked it up before I realized what it was. I was shocked to discover that Bijoux had downed an entire 12-ounce bag of Hershey Miniature candy bars that were intended for Halloween use. They were 100% chocolate, with some crunch or some nuts thrown in. I was slightly surprised that there was not a wrapper in sight; I didn’t expect that Bijoux would have been able to actually unwrap her treasure, but I also didn’t expect that there would be no paper trail left anywhere either.

Knowing that chocolate can be toxic to dogs if ingested in large amounts, I tried to keep calm as I called the Animal Hospital. I told the receptionist that she was acting completely normal for the time being, but was worried. She put me on hold in order to ask one of the doctors about my best plan of action. When she returned to the phone, she gave me two options. She said that Bijoux needed to get as much of the chocolate out of her system as possible, and I could either write down what I needed to do to induce vomiting at home, or I could bring her in. I wisely chose the latter.

The doctor who saw us that day asked me how much chocolate she ate, and I told him about the bag. He said that I did the right thing by bringing her in, although a dog of her size would had to have ingested much more chocolate to die from it…so I felt reassured. I left Bijoux with the great people at the animal hospital overnight and brought her home 24 hours later, good as new. It was a loud-and-clear wake-up call, and we all tried to be more careful with putting food away in the cabinets after that.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Mi Casa Es Su Casa

Lesson Number Twelve: What’s Hers Is Hers, and What’s Mine Is Hers

In the fall of 2000 after years of renting, we finally purchased a home. Our new home had both a family room and a living room. We were very excited about the idea of having some new furniture; our living room couch and loveseat were purchased in 1991 when we moved to Kenosha. Our family room sofa bed was in decent condition but was extremely uncomfortable. We made the decision to discard the sofa bed and use the couch and loveseat in our new family room, which was on the lower level. We would purchase new furniture for the living room, which was the room that all visitors to our house would see. After we ordered a cream-colored couch, the concern that Jim and I shared was that Bijoux wouldn’t stay off the new furniture. (Remember, the Couch Incident?)

We became determined to work extra hard to teach this old(er) dog a new trick. After our new furniture was delivered, we were extremely diligent in keeping Bijoux on the floor. In fact, she adopted my eight-foot by ten-foot Oriental Poppy wool rug from Pottery Barn as her very own, and eventually parked herself there whenever we were in the living room or the adjacent dining room.

Time after time Bijoux tried to hop up and settle herself on the new couch with us, and time after time we would scold her. After a couple of weeks, she was able to remember that the new couch was “ours”, yet she was still allowed on “her” couch and loveseat in the family room. Or so I thought... actually, she yet again proved that she was smarter than we gave her credit for!

One morning I left the house as usual. I backed the car out of the garage and into the street. Suddenly, I realized that I forgot something. I drove back up the driveway and ran into the house. The forgotten item was in the kitchen and as I ran up the stairs, I noticed a familiar black, brown, and white furry ball curled up on “our” couch. Bijoux’s head shot up with a start when she realized that I was back in the house, and as she saw me (and heard me scolding her), she slunk, ears pulled back as far as they could go, off the couch and onto the rug.

When I returned to my car, I started the ignition again and began to back out into the street. I looked at our picture window and noticed Bijoux sitting on our couch, watching me drive away. Amazingly, as I glared at her from the driver’s seat and pointed my finger downward…and she got down. (It was highly unlikely, I’ll concede, that she saw the way I glared at her, however, I’m pretty certain she sensed the anger in the way I was gesturing to her!) I drove away, laughing.

After that episode, I watched the picture window carefully when I left the driveway. Sometimes I could see Bijoux’s cute little face near the bottom of the window as she watched me, and sometimes I saw her mostly-white body creep carefully up onto our couch, as if she thought that the slower she climbed up, the less chance there would be that she’d be noticed. Upon my return home, she was always smart enough to listen for the garage door. Once she heard that, she took off running towards the door in order to greet us as we came in.

Even today I giggle to myself when I think of her sneakiness, her knowing that at least while we were present, she wasn’t allowed on our couch—only on hers.

Wednesday, January 9, 2008

Putting the "NO!" in Snow

Lesson Number Eleven: There’s No Business Like Snow Business

Bijoux was two years old by the time she experienced her first snowfall. She was not frightened or confused; rather, she was just curious. We exploited her tennis ball-catching talent and helped her develop it into a flair for snowball-catching. We had a great time outside during the winter. Bijoux made the drudgery of shoveling seem to fly by, because we spent part of the time tossing snowballs in her direction. She got very excited when one of us started to pack snow into a little ball, and she ran right over to catch it. Oftentimes, the snow was too powdery and dry to pack, but she still tried to catch the handfuls of loose particles as if it were the most fun activity she’d ever taken part in. The pattern of her play involved trying to catch the snow that was thrown to her, and then running a lap or two (or three) all the way around the house as fast as she could go, barely dodging us as she passed us each time.

Her love for the snow was also, unfortunately, the cause of much drama later on in her life (what else would you expect from a Princess?). The northern winters were often harsh, with temperatures falling below zero and wind chills in the negative 20’s and 30’s. On occasion, she would refuse to go outside to urinate unless we physically pushed her out the door. Other times, she would willingly go out, following an odiferous trail all the way to the back of the yard. (These times, by the way, almost always happened when Jim and I were only in a robe, with bare feet) As she sniffed her way around outside, the cold eventually attacked her feet and she would stop dead in her tracks, looking at us looking at her through the door. She picked one paw up out of the snow, held it up for a moment, and then put it back down, only to lift another one up. Her feet were freezing and she wasn’t able to (or didn’t feel like?) get herself back to the door. Jim or I had to rush around to get completely dressed to go outside in the yard and rescue our big baby before frostbite set in (Did I mention that she had to be carried?).

One year I got smart. I went to the pet store to check on the cost of boots for dogs. They were outrageously priced, and I stood in front of the display for a minute or two, mentally sifting through my options. In a flash of brilliance, I hurried out to my car and drove to Target, where I purchased several pairs of baby socks. Waterproof? No. However, we didn’t have a sleddin’ dog and for the amount of time that she was actually outside, I determined that if I put two socks on each paw, she’d be fine.

I’m still not sure if the $40 I saved was worth it; the ordeal we had to go through each time she wanted to go outside was sort of tedious. We ended up having to loosely place my hair rubberbands around the socks to keep them on her feet. She was a new dog though, trekking around outside like it was spring. Her “Shnoh Shnocks”, as we called them, saved us many trips outside for several years after that discovery.

In January of 1998, Bijoux’s excitement for the winter had catastrophic consequences. I had been shoveling snow while the kids played close by, and Bijoux was begging for snowballs, as usual. The snow was easy to pack that afternoon; the morning temperature had been slightly warmer than normal, but cooled down again as the day went on, producing a thin layer of ice on top of the snow in the yard. As I tossed snowballs for her, she took off on some laps around the house each time, just like always. Suddenly she appeared from the side yard, but she was limping. Figuring that her paws were just too cold, I took her inside the house and sat down on the floor with her. I checked between the pads on her paws for ice and found none. It seemed like she was holding one of her back legs in a strange way, so I closed my hand over her back paw to warm it up. I then went to the kitchen and filled a small bowl with warm water. I brought it back to her and dipped her paw in it. She made no sound but the look on her face told me that she was having some discomfort.

Jim arrived home and, after I apprised him of the situation, offered to take her to the vet for a quick check. When he returned over an hour later without her, I started to get upset. The vet discovered that in running around like she had been, she tore her meniscus. Jim was told that if we didn’t put her through knee surgery immediately, not only would she would never walk correctly again, but she could also have chronic pain in that leg.

As we told friends and family what had happened, we joked about the expense of the surgery and how we just couldn’t believe that we were putting our dog through this, but in actuality we wouldn’t have had it any other way. Needless to say, Bijoux’s days of doing laps around the house in the snow were over. She would try to run around many times after she had long recovered from her surgery, but the thought of her injuring herself again made me squeamish, and I made her stop.

Monday, January 7, 2008

The Name's A Game

Lesson Number Ten: It's All in the Name

Nicknames are normally created either to shorten a given name or with some sort of intent to identify something unique about the recipient. Bijoux had many nicknames over the years. Some were coherent and could be spelled out easily, had there been a need to write them down (like now); others were just a bunch of nonsense. The common thread that tied most of them together was that, for some reason, they came from me.

During the puppy years, I began that most annoying (especially to Jim, and probably to most other clear-thinking, “normal” adults) habit of speaking to her in baby talk. I didn’t do it all the time; rather, I usually used it when I praised her or petted her. From this baby talk came the first coherent nicknames: “My Girl” and “My Little Baby” were most commonly used at first. Only my closest friends and family could watch (and listen to) the spectacle without questioning my sanity.

Our friends’ son, Nicholas, was just a toddler when he referred to Bijoux as “Boo-doo”, and later, Dylan called her “Bee-doo”. Jim’s Mom used to call her “Kirby”, after the brand of vacuum cleaners, because of her talent and desire for cleaning up the crumbs. It wasn’t until Bijoux’s death that we realized how “crumby” our floor could get!

As time went on, I would snuggle up to Bijoux and babble incessantly about my “Pooky”, a name that stemmed from the teddy bear belonging to the cartoon strip cat “Garfield”.



Eventually “Pooky” evolved into “Boo-shee Boo-shee”. Occasionally I threw in the more normally constructed and natural-sounding shortened version of her name, “Bij”, and then that was shortened even more to “B”. Sometimes “B” turned into “Busy Bee”, coming from the favorite toy of the Weimeraner in the movie “Best in Show”.



The earliest occurrence of the nickname that stuck with her the longest and was used by the most people turned up in a conversation (one-sided, of course) that I was having with Bijoux one day. I was calling her my “Boo-shee Boo-shee”, and then turned that into “Shoo-shee”. I thought of the spelling of her name in relation to “Siouxsie and the Banshees”, a popular 1980’s band. I called Bijoux “Siouxsie” (pronounced Susie) and for some reason, I couldn’t let it go. Julie used to warn me, “She’s going to answer to that one day if you keep using it.”

Lo and behold, one day she did! “Siouxsie” became “Susie”, and after a while I used it interchangeably with her given name.

Saturday, January 5, 2008

Who's the Baby Now?

Lesson Number 9: Always Keep Them Guessing, or...Never Let Them See You Sweat

In the fall of 1991, we happily discovered that we would be adding a baby to our family. Our bundle of joy was due to arrive in June of 1992, and as it was my habit to plan ahead, I researched the best ways to prepare our “first baby” for the new baby. I had heard from several friends that the cherished family pet quickly becomes “just an animal” when the baby comes around, and I didn’t want that to happen. I envisioned a home where the baby is taught to socialize properly with the dog, and they would grow up together, happily frolicking in the fenced-in yard together. Frolicking, however, was years off. First I had to do a couple of things to acclimate Bijoux to a House With Baby. We had spent lots of time with Rex and “his baby”, Nicholas. That time was very valuable in Bijoux’s life experiences to that point. She was always gentle with Nick, and if he pulled her tail or tried to roughhouse with her, she would glance at us as if to say, “Yes, I’m being patient.” She truly loved Nick, and I hoped that she would react the same way when a baby actually spent 24 hours each day on “her” turf.

In the later months of my pregnancy, I let Bijoux spend time in the baby’s room as Jim and I set it up. Once I even—against all of the leading baby experts’ advice—let her lay down in the crib, snuggled up in the blankets and leaning against an unopened package of Pampers. I even sprinkled baby powder on blankets and let her smell them. I wasn’t really sure how much more to do, because I really wanted to live this dream of an integrated household.

When I went into labor with Dylan, my parents and sister came to pick Bijoux up and took her home for a couple of days. Even with all of the activity going on with Dylan’s birth, I thought about Bijoux and wondered how she would react when she “met” him.

After the three of us had been home for a couple of days, we were ready to introduce Bijoux and Dylan. It was a tense morning for Jim and me, as we tried to anticipate how the meeting would go. When Julie arrived with Bijoux, I was sitting on the floor in Dylan’s room, holding him. Jim and Julie called for Bijoux, and she trotted into the room. I spoke to her in a quiet, calm tone, “introducing” her to the baby. After all of the worry we went through, she gave his little face a quick sniff and promptly turned around to walk away. We human adults just looked at each other in amazement and disbelief as Bijoux proceeded to ignore us all, making herself comfortable on the couch.

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

Try and Try Again...Until It's Time To Give Up

Lesson Number Eight: Persistence Is The Key…But Some Things Just Aren’t Meant To Be

Early Education experts say that children learn through repetition. Animal experts agree with this statement as it relates to young animals. “Practice, practice, practice” is the mantra of anyone trying to learn something. I am convinced that the reason Bijoux was so smart is because in her earliest years with us, Jim and I spent hours training her. There were teachable moments (house-breaking, “sit”, “stay”, etc.) and near-impossible-to-teach moments (“roll over”).

She had achieved great success with “Sit”, “Lay down”, “Go outside?” and, most importantly, “No!” She understood when I said, “Want a treat?”, “Hungry?”, or “Want some food?” She certainly knew her name. (In later years, she even responded to “Susie”, but that’s in another essay.) She even looked up at the ceiling when I said “Up!” and responded by looking around if I said “Where’s Dylan?” If I said, “Who’s that??” she ran to the door or window. If I said, “Daddy’s home!” she would bark like crazy and anxiously wait for Jim to walk in the door of the house. The fact that I could say “Roll Over!” and nothing happened was definitely not a communication problem, then. When she was a puppy and I was spending hours teaching her the various tricks that she carried with her throughout her life, I did my best to teach her to roll over. I gently pushed her down, paws straight out in front of her. As I said, “Roll over”, I put both of my hands on her back and rolled her over, her legs wildly searching for the ground again. After many days and many attempts, I decided that teaching her to roll over just wasn’t going to happen.

Running was another activity in which Bijoux, for the most part, refused to participate. Jim used running to keep himself in shape for the Navy, and was looking forward to having a partner to keep him company. The very first day he took her out, she got very excited at the sight of the leash. He attached it to her collar and walked her outside. When he came back minutes later, he told me that at the corner of our street when he prepared to “take off”, she sat down and planted her feet firmly into the sidewalk, refusing to move. After repeatedly tugging on her leash and her absolute refusal to accompany him, he pulled her home and, highly agitated, gave up. As a dog set free in a yard, she would run wildly, doing laps around the yard and the house until she could barely breathe. As a dog on a leash, running was just not part of the repertoire.

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Don't Take Candy From Strangers Who Are On Top of Your Roof

Lesson Number 7: Everyone Deserves To Be Fussed Over Now and Then, or...How To Raise a Princess Dog, part FOUR

When we moved to Naperville, a neighbor recommended Petsmart, a pet supply store. She told me that they allowed—-nay, they welcomed-—pets on leashes while their owners shopped. This was quite exciting to me, and shortly after I spoke to my neighbor, I put Bijoux in the car for our first field trip.

Bijoux became immediately confused when, after the ten-minute drive, I not only stopped the car, but also talked to her as if she were leaving the car with me. I think she, probably due to her intense sense of smell and her recognition that other animals had been there before us, thought that we were at a veterinarian’s office instead of a Walt Disney World for dogs. When walked around to her side of the car, I attached the leash to her collar and said, “Come on!” She didn’t move a muscle; she merely sat there staring at me, as if to say, “Are you kidding?” It took some coaxing, but I finally got her out of the car. I let her sniff around for a few minutes in the parking lot, and then we headed towards the entrance.

Freaked out momentarily by the “whoosh” and the rapid movement of the double electric sliding doors as we stepped onto the entrance pad, Bijoux needed more coaxing in order to enter the store. Once we did, however, she suddenly became excited and tugged on her leash, dragging me behind her on her first exploration in many years of a retail store since Leewards in Norfolk, Virginia.

Bijoux sniffed excitedly while we explored the aisles and aisles of dog supplies, from food to toys to beds to rawhide bones. Every now and then I had to pull on her leash a bit, to keep her from helping herself to the many treats that were “conveniently” placed at doggie level.

While we were there, I decided to take her in to the grooming department to get her nails clipped. The friendly woman who took care of us spoke to Bijoux for the duration of our visit, and when she finished with the business of nail trimming, she asked me if she could give Bijoux a treat. I said yes, and was lucky enough to witness the first occurrence of one of the funniest habits Bijoux had: her refusal to take treats from strangers. The woman held a Milk Bone between her thumb and forefinger and offered it to Bijoux, and Bijoux sniffed once and then turned her head away. She kept talking to Bijoux, asking her if she wanted it, and Bijoux walked away from her. Finally, I took the treat from the woman, thanked her, and walked Bijoux out to the main part of the store.

When we reached the end of the aisle, I called Bijoux to come closer, kneeled down, and offered her the Milk Bone. She promptly took it from my hand and held it between her teeth. As we walked around the store she didn’t chew it; she calmly held it in her mouth, occasionally dropping it and picking it back up, until we reached the car. I opened the passenger door and she hopped up into her seat and then ate the bone.

From then on, her routine from taking treats in public, from strangers, or at the vet, was the same. She refused any and all treats unless one of her family members gave them to her.



When it came to treats (in either variety: doggie snacks or people snacks), Bijoux was a happy camper when anything came her way. A pet peeve of mine grew over time as she became “grabby”, yanking the treat from the hand of the person who fed her, so to speak. It was time for more training. I wanted to teach her the command “Nice”, as in “Be Nice”. Each time I had a treat for her, I commanded her first to sit or lay down. My next command was “Niiiiiiiice”, and as I held the treat slightly above her mouth, she eventually learned to delicately take it from me, just barely grasping it between her teeth. She waited until I completely released it to her before she chomped down and enjoyed it. Going further, I sometimes put her treat between my teeth and got down on her level. I said, “Niiiiiice” as well as I could, and she learned to take it gently from me in this way as well.

One very enjoyable routine I had with Bijoux was discovered after I taught her the command “Speak”. The basic “Speak” command entailed my giving the order and her barking once. After a while we spiced it up: after she barked, I asked, “What?” She wagged her tail and barked again. “What’d you say?” I asked, watching her grow both excited and impatient, barking so that I would relinquish whatever treat I had in my hand.

Talking to Bijoux was one of my favorite things about spending time with her. (BLOGNOTE: I realize that there might be some non-dog people out there who are curious about my stories anyway and, in reading this, are now completely convinced that I am a freak. I'm not...and offer no apologies. LOL)

Sometimes in play, she “talked” to me while I tried to “steal” her rawhide bone. First she barked in her normal way. As I brought my face closer to hers and the theft was inevitable, she tried to “talk me out of it” by whining. As I whined back it antagonized her even more, and she got louder and louder until I clamped down on her bone and she either growled at me (To tell me to go somewhere else and get my own bone; she wasn’t really in the mood) or released the bone and licked my face.

Julie had some great “conversations” with Bijoux as well. Not being satisfied with that old joke about asking your dog what’s on top of the house (Roof), Julie took it one step further. She reached back into her memory banks and pulled out the lyrics to the Bloodhound Gang hit “The Roof Is On Fire”. As she stood in front of Bijoux, Julie said “The” and waited for Bijoux to add the “Roof!” Sometimes it took a little longer than others, but when Bijoux “roofed”, Julie would say “Is on Fire!” Repeating this the three times that’s required when singing the original song, Julie always stopped before going on with the rest of the song, which didn’t require Bijoux’s talents and was also quite vulgar.

Sunday, December 16, 2007

The Importance of a Wardrobe and Good Hair and Nails

Lesson Number 7: Everyone Deserves To Be Fussed Over Now and Then, or...How To Raise a Princess Dog, part three

(BLOGNOTE: This one is a little fragmented...excuse the rough transitions; I am posting this as I last left it!)

Every princess values the way she looks, and always enjoys those special times when emphasis is placed upon her appearance. Or so I’ve heard. Frankly, we never would have wanted nor been able to afford the kind of dog which needed a regular grooming appointment with a professional. The biggest part of grooming Bijoux was trying to keep her nails clipped to a manageable length. Bathing her came in second, as nobody in the house likes a stinky dog. Further down on the list was brushing her, which is something I enjoyed doing when she was a puppy—not because it was something she needed—because it was quality time. Her coat was short and smooth by nature, and when our household life got filled with too many activities to handle in the time we had each day, I stopped brushing her. Bijoux hardly saw or felt her brush for years, getting treated to a stroking by brush only rarely.

One day, Julie asked if we had a brush for Bijoux. I told her where to find it, and she took Bijoux outside on the front porch. Bijoux sat down near Julie’s legs and reveled in the feel-good time as Julie brushed her. This became a tradition for them, and Princess Bijoux finally had a coat worthy of her status.



One of the important lessons one learns in raising a puppy is the attraction that said puppy has to any article of clothing belonging to its master. In many ways, it’s one of the methods a dog uses to indulge or pamper herself. Bijoux was no different. When we brought her home and said goodnight to her, we tucked her in with a blanket and one of our t-shirts. Part of the reason that socks were among her favorite toys to play with, I believe, was because we had worn them. It was no surprise, then, that we often found Bijoux nesting in our clean, freshly dried laundry. In fact, she made regular appearances (sometimes with muddy paws) not only on any huge pile of clean clothing that was waiting to be folded on the couch, but even in laundry baskets full of clean, folded clothing. I can’t count the number of times she actually dumped laundry baskets full of clean, folded clothing over, while trying to get in!

I also have a picture of Bijoux, cozy as could be, relaxing in my underwear and pajama drawer, which happened to be on the floor at the time because I had just sifted through it and refolded everything.

When she became sick, I tried to give her some comfort by leaving my robe on the couch so she could snuggle up in it while we were all gone for the day. I often returned home to find her entire body underneath the robe, with just her little face sticking out.



Bijoux went through a stage—or, rather, I went through a stage—where she enjoyed wearing different types of bandanas around her neck. I always thought it was hilarious to see dogs “dressed”, although I thought that the financial commitment that would be required to keep her in sweaters and such was not reasonable at all. I spent a couple of dollars on a pink bandana in the “Western Cowboy” style—with the paisley design and all—as well as a holiday bandana that was made specifically for dogs. Bijoux wore these bandanas daily, and they were quite the conversation pieces. After a while I “grew out of” my stage, and Bijoux went back to wearing her collar by itself. It wasn’t until about seven years later when Minnie stayed with us for a week that she again “got dressed”: I cut two funky pink and orange bandanas from some scrap I had in the closet, and the girls were twins during their visit.



Bijoux gave “neurotic” a whole new world of meaning in many different ways, but one of the funniest was her nail-biting tendency. I don’t remember her doing this for the first few years, however at some point in the middle of her life she was laying next to me on the couch and I heard a soft grinding noise. I looked down at her and noticed that she appeared to be chewing on her paw. I leaned in closer and took her paw in my hand to check it out. Her paw was disgustingly wet and slimy. I noticed that a couple of her nails were jagged, and then realized what she had been doing.

The next time we made a trip to the vet, I asked the doctor questions about her nail biting. I was told that I didn’t have anything to worry about, so I didn’t. Bijoux continued this habit for the rest of her life. It didn’t seem to be a nervous habit; for example, I didn’t notice her chewing on her nails on a car ride to the vet or upon being left home alone for the day. She seemed to bite her nails for two reasons: the first was to intentionally shorten them if it had been a while since I had her nails trimmed. The second reason for her habit appeared to me to be a way to fill time. It was not at all unusual for us to be sitting on the couch together (just as we were the first time I noticed the nail biting) as she gnawed away at her nails absent-mindedly, her eyes glazed over, in a sort of glorious ignorance of everyone and everything around her.

Click here for part 4!

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Food, Glorious Food!

Lesson Number 7: Everyone Deserves To Be Fussed Over Now and Then, or...How To Raise a Princess Dog, part two


Everyone who reads any material on dog ownership knows that table scraps are a big no-no. I understand this, in theory. As someone who grew up with three dachshunds in the house who commenced vomiting whenever they ingested something that wasn’t made for dogs, I had great intentions of following this Golden Rule for dogs.

Alas, but great intentions are often thwarted by a combination of reality and cuteness. Bijoux learned how to beg without actually going through the motions. Her legs were too long and gangly to sit up on her rear end and beg in the traditional canine method. As a puppy, she begged by barking. We curbed that bad habit, but as a very creative animal, she found a way around that. In her later years she refined the art of begging. If her subject (usually me) was sitting at the dining room table, she would stand at the side, wagging her tail and either sneezing or letting out a “Hrrumph”. When that got her nothing (as was the usual case), she would disappear from sight…but only for a minute. She was under the table, and in the next moment, her head would suddenly pop into my lap, where she would rest it as she looked at me with those eyes (See Lesson on Cuteness). Her upper half would be completely still, but her entire rear end would move along with the intensity of her tail wag. When she was completely annoying, we commanded her to “Go lay down!” She backed up, not taking her eyes off of what she desired, until her back feet stepped off of the hardwood floor onto our area rug, where she plopped her body down in one clumsy motion. Eventually she would slink back over, only to be sent out again.

We discovered that Bijoux had certain “favorite” people foods by trial and error; that is, when we accidentally left a full lunch or dinner plate too close to the edge of the table and walked away from it to grab the ketchup or other accompaniment, Bijoux would calmly sneak over to it and make a calm, collected, well-thought out attack. We would return to the table to catch her, paws on the chair to hold her up, gobbling food like there was no tomorrow. After being scolded, she would slink away…but the memory of the food she ate lasted forever. After each instance (if it was something she really enjoyed), her begging would dramatically increase in urgency.

One of her favorite foods throughout her life was toast with peanut butter and jelly on it. It was something about the smell combined with her memory of the taste and texture (from her first Grand Toast Theft). Whenever this was on my menu, she went ballistic. She sat and stared at me as I ate it, cocking her head to one side and then the other. If I looked at her, she would sometimes pick up one paw, as if to tell me, “Hey…shake my paw. I’m offering! And then you can reward me with some peanut butter and jelly toast!” Eventually, when that got her nothing, she commenced light whining. Gradually the whining would build up to a bark/sneeze combination. It was surely one of the cutest things I had ever seen, and always got the best of me. In her early years, I would wait until the cuteness got to be unbearable before I would treat her. Later on and until the day she died, I always saved the last corner of my peanut butter and jelly toast for Bijoux, no matter if she asked for it or not. Wait. Who am I kidding? She always asked for it.

Toast in its raw form was just plain bread. Bijoux didn’t care about the formality of using a toaster. I once returned home from work to find a torn, empty, plastic bread bag on the kitchen floor. Thinking back to the morning rush in the house, I marveled at my own stupidity, having left a brand new loaf of wheat bread on the kitchen counter, completely within Bijoux’s reach. Looking at her guilty little face, tail tucked between her legs as she backed away from me slowly, and noticing that she looked physically fine at this point, I decided that she had waited probably a whole five or ten seconds after I left the house to “make the kill”. The poor loaf of bread never had a chance.

The other food that was in Bijoux’s top two was rice. The story of her attachment to rice has a strange “full circle” quality. As a puppy, Bijoux had some intense and mysterious intestinal problems. For many weeks she was on a diet of broth, chicken, and white rice. She loved it.

Over the years, Jim became quite fond of making Stir Fry for dinner. When Bijoux caught a whiff of the rice, she was beside herself. I started to put some rice in a bowl for her, and she ate dinner “with us”. She became so excited about the rice that she devoured it quickly, practically without chewing or breathing. We noticed that after her rice binge, her chest seemed enormous before the rice worked its way through her system. After we made this discovery, we took some control over her rice meal. We allowed her to take a couple of bites, and then one of us would command her to “Sit”. She sat down right in front of her bowl, head hanging down towards her meal, ears dangling millimeters away from the rice, and waited. We let her sit there for a moment or two, to make sure she had swallowed and taken a breath, and then one of us would say, “Okay!” That was her signal to continue eating. We repeated this exercise three or four times, and she would walk away from her empty dish satisfied, but not overly plump as before.

In her final months of life, she wouldn’t eat her dog food. Desperate for her to get something in her stomach, I cooked chicken and rice, and sometimes scrambled eggs, for her daily. At the end she wouldn’t even touch the rice, and I understood that she wouldn’t live much longer.

Click here for part 3!

Thursday, December 6, 2007

How To Raise a Princess Dog

Lesson Number Seven: Everyone Deserves To Be Fussed Over, Now and Then…Or, How To Raise A Princess Dog, Part one

Bijoux’s status as a Princess was cemented firmly in place even before we parked the pickup truck outside on that very first night we brought her home. As such, that meant that extreme care would be taken to ensure that certain things happened to enhance her quality of life. Now, we weren’t completely over the edge; we didn’t build her an air-conditioned doghouse or feed her filet mignon for dinner, but we—I, especially—certainly didn’t bring her into our home as an animal that was merely to be tolerated and patted on the head once or twice a day.

The first important order of business, after all of her basic physical needs had been met, was to make sure she had a proper AKC name. Her rank as a purebred beagle affiliated with the American Kennel Club mattered to nobody, really. We had no intention of showing her, and we certainly had no plans to breed her. In fact, we were having her spayed as soon as it was possible to do so. I think the level of urgency upon which I had placed on registering her with the AKC stemmed from my experience as a young girl with Willie and Sandy. When they were born, my sister Julie and I wanted to give Willie the name “Cloud”, because of the smeary white markings on his back. Our “brilliant” idea was promptly shot down by our parents, who instead decided on the very regal-sounding names “Sir Sandor von Dapple” and Sir Wilhelm von Dapple”. Julie and I didn’t like the names, but as we were not in charge at the time, we had no choice but to let it go.

When it was my turn, then, to bestow a meaningful name on my own pet, I took it very seriously. Jim and I had already chosen her first name; now we just needed something more. I suggested “Aurora” as her middle name. I had always been a fan of mythology, and Aurora was the Goddess of the Dawn. I told Jim that this name was appropriate because Bijoux got us up everyday at sunrise. Having noticed that many AKC names end with something that gives a hint about a long and distinguished line of ancestors, we brainstormed a bit and finally came up with “Our Lady”. It was only right, Jim rationalized, because Bijoux really acted like she was one of us, a person. I promptly sent in the AKC registration form and a check. When we received the paperwork back—indicating that “Bijoux Aurora, Our Lady” was indeed now an official, registered member of the American Kennel Club—I took that very important envelope and put it…right in the file cabinet. It’s still in our safe deposit box, to this very day.

To say that Bijoux was “particular” about things would be a massive understatement. While occasionally frustrating, most of the time I found her finicky ways to be quite hilarious. The Milk Bone Company manufactures a treat called “Flavor Snacks”. These are in the shape of traditional Milk Bone dog treats but in five special flavors, which were, at the time, chicken, beef, turkey, lamb, and vegetable. Bijoux would eat every flavor except vegetable. I handed her a treat, and she hungrily tossed it to the back of her mouth and chewed like crazy until she was able to swallow it…unless I had tried to give her the green one. She sniffed at it tentatively, occasionally touching it with the tip of her tongue, and then she turned her head away from my hand. What nerve! I ended up throwing away boxes of Flavor Snacks, completely empty except for one layer of vegetable-flavored snacks that lined the bottom. Finally, we moved on to other dog treats.

At times, Bijoux’s failure to be the boss on a continual basis caused her to pout in her own doggie kind of way. Normally she would merely walk away, tail down, and not looking us in the eye at all. There were a couple of times in her life, however, when she definitely made a bigger impression.

Other than the Couch Incident, which I believe was started out of just plain “puppyness” and developed into a sort of retribution for being left home alone for hours at a time, the earliest indication of her demanding our respect appeared on one summer day in 1990. Jim and I walked to our local K-mart, which was only about one mile away from home. Why we walked there is now a mystery to me, a detail completely lost in the shuffle. Oddly enough, I do remember that we went there to purchase a new shower curtain and a set of shower curtain rings. The day was very hot and, as we had no air conditioning, the windows were open to the screens and we had a couple of fans running to try to circulate the air. We had been playing with the Princess that morning and had decided that as we wouldn’t be gone very long, we’d not put her in her crate. We took her outside so she could relieve herself, and then put her back inside. Not having a clue about her mischievous persona at this point, we said, “See you later, alligator!” and left the house as she watched us from her perch on top of the couch.

We returned less than an hour later with our shower curtain and rings, and as Jim unlocked the door, Bijoux was right there, complete with wagging tail and yelps of joy. It only took a second or two before our noses noticed the offensive smell. Bijoux had obviously left a “gift” somewhere in the house. It wasn’t the first time, nor would it be the last; anyone raising a puppy expects accidents now and then.

It was actually the placement of this gift that boggled our minds and is still a story that we laugh about. As we made our way through the doorway and into the house, we found it. She had placed herself in front of the large box fan that was standing on the floor in the living room—set on its highest setting due to the heat of the day—and left a stinky mess less than 10 inches from the face of the fan. The smell was then carried throughout the entire house. To this day I’m unsure exactly how she was able to do that without being blown across the room. As we tried everything we could think of to quickly air out a stinky house on a hot summer day, we wondered to ourselves if she could have had the intelligence to do what she did intentionally…but how could it not have been done intentionally? From that day on, we gave her more credit for the process of thought than most people would find normal!

Click here for part 2!

Monday, December 3, 2007

Cute=Good...Or Not?

Lesson Number Six: Cuteness CAN Get You What You Want (Or...Choose Your Battles)

Everyone’s a sucker for a Cute puppy. Those eyes—Puppy Dog Eyes—are famous for a reason. “Don’t look at me with those Puppy Dog Eyes!” The manipulative qualities of Puppy Dog Eyes are infinite in nature. Besides the eyes, puppies have lots of Cuteness: floppy ears, a particularly adorable tail, tiny teeth, the way they prance, the way they fall all over themselves when they are running, the tricks they can quickly learn when they figure out that there are rewards involved, and those paws! These, and many additional things (depending on the dog and the sensibilities of the owner), not only melt a master’s heart in seconds, but also can sometimes be the very reason why puppies are not trained properly. Cuteness—there are two kinds of it: natural and learned—breeds inconsistency…unless you’re careful!

It can be quite tempting to just let a puppy do whatever she wants to do, merely because of its C.F., or Cute Factor. When you first bring a puppy home, almost everything she does is about a “ten” on the C.F. scale of one to ten:
• Look, she’s curling up on a blanket!
• Look, she’s eating her food!
• Look how cute she is while she’s drinking her water!
• Isn’t that simply amazing, the way she tugs on that squeaky toy?
• Uh-oh, she peed on the carpet! Bad girl! Ooh, but you’re so CUTE!

After a time, though, puppy owners, just like new parents, must be sure to separate Natural Cuteness from Learned Cuteness. They arrive at a figurative Fork in the Road. Some owners take the Wrong Fork. They make a semi-serious effort to train their dog and subsequently give up because it’s “too hard” (and even sometimes because they don’t want to hurt their puppy’s feelings with the Tough Love that training requires!) and their dog is just “too Cute”. Some owners take the Right Fork. These owners are rewarded handsomely because they train themselves first, and then use consistency to teach their dog right from wrong.

Jim and I definitely wanted to take the Right Fork. It was important to us to balance Bijoux’s sky-high Natural C.F. rating with solid discipline and training so that her behavior would stay in check, and thus, her Learned C.F. (her ability to get what she wanted by just being cute) would be low on the scale. After studying “Superpuppy”, I was sure that we were up to the task at hand. We, having no children yet, spent much of our free time each day with Bijoux, balancing play with behavior management. There were some bumps in the road, however; i.e. the Couch Incident and Bijoux’s ability to “Cute” herself into bed with us. Over time I slowly realized, because Bijoux showed me, that people can bend rules occasionally and still stay on the Right Fork. Learned Cuteness can sometimes be, well, Cute.

Generally, we praised Bijoux as much as possible (when she deserved it, of course!), and when she misbehaved, we disciplined her but were quick to forgive her Little Cute Self. (I was definitely quicker than Jim, though; I’m the Softy) Once we came out of the “New Puppy Fog”, we achieved great balance, but only after we started choosing our battles.

Cute? When Bijoux would actually make it from one trip outside to the next, without soiling the floor. Not Cute? Well, you guessed it. As with all puppies, we had good days and bad days in the housebreaking department. Cute? When we hung a ribbon filled with jingle bells from the handle on the sliding glass door in back as well as on the front entrance to our home, and taught Bijoux to ring them with her nose when she had to do her business. It took time; each time we took her outside we’d say, “Do you want to go outside?” and then gently hit her nose against the bells. It was a relatively easy lesson for her to learn, and it was a charming trick to show visitors. Battle won.

Cute? When Bijoux would run outside in the yard, suddenly put her nose to the ground, and roll on her back, rubbing her body into the grass beneath her. Not Cute: when Bijoux would come to the door and smell like who-knows-what because of some kind of stinky bug (or something!) she had been rolling in.

Cute? When I would then give her a bath and then sprayed her with one of my sweet-smelling Bath and Body Works products as she sneezed and stared at me sheepishly, seeming to feel remorse for her actions. Not Cute: when, thirty minutes later, she would beg to go outside again, acting like she had to urinate, and then perform the same rolling act in a different, yet just as stinky, area of grass. One summer I was bathing her three or four times in a day because I couldn’t stand her smell. Leaving her outside for the day was out of the question; it was too hot. Battle lost. I gave up; how do you keep an Animal (In Bijoux’s defense, I often told Jim “Don’t forget, she is an Animal,” and ten minutes later I was claiming to have had a meaningful, non-verbal exchange with my Girl. I truly felt like we understood each other.) from doing what comes naturally? In some cases, it’s not worth trying. I kept the Dog Shampoo industry in business for years.

Cute? Bijoux’s ability to catch things, like tennis balls and, in winter, snowballs. Not Cute? A dog that constantly begs for you to toss food at her. Cute? Her Puppy Dog Eyes, upon smelling and hearing that you’re microwaving popcorn for dessert. Cuter? Her ability to leap up and catch said popcorn. Battle lost. Or won? It depends on who you ask. There were challenges everyday, and making the decision about which issues could slide and which weren’t to be negotiated was only one of the many joys of having a dog in the house.