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Carter’s No Fun, Stressful, Very Bad Day

When Life Doesn't Give You What You Need

Sometimes, life doesn’t jive with what our dogs need – or want. I am more than a dog owner and a foster mom. I’m also a friend, sister, daughter, neighbor, and each of those roles at times influences my role as caregiver for pets. Sometimes there are conflicts, and I have to ask my dogs to do things that are outside their norm or comfort zone.

I’m currently on the coast of AL, near where my family resides. I’m here for a scheduled work weekend at my parents’ estate. There’s a long-term plan in place to get the estate ready for sale and the first step to this is to rid the acreage of my father’s things. He’s a hoarder. This weekend’s task was to empty out two of the 9 junk cars that are scattered about the property and sort through the items to retrieve his valuables. It’s time-consuming, detailed, and stressful – he was present for the cleanout. 

Because I knew it was going to be an all-day event and I refuse to leave my dogs without a bathroom break for 10 hours, I brought them with me. I also knew that while at the parent’s house, they’d be in their crates for most of the day, but I’d be able to give them several exercise periods. It was the best plan I had.

I forgot to include this detail in my plan: Viktor, my nephew’s dog, would also be present – this beautiful dog suffers from separation anxiety, and he would have to be present and uncrated for the day. My original plan to have my dogs crated and on the porch in the shade was now no longer an option. 

The angels must have known about this day because they gave us beautiful weather and a safe temperature. I decided to leave my dogs in their crates in the car – parked in the shade, the temperature was cool. Of course, all of the windows and the back hatch were fully open to allow air circulation. Temperature wise, they were quite comfortable the whole day, nary a pant. 

I’d also prepared busy work for them, stuffed Kong toys and slow-release feeders. Otis was as content as he could be, given the circumstances.

Carter, however, was increasingly stressed.

Viktor (my nephew’s dog) barks. A lot. Carter was quite stressed about a stranger dog, a stranger dog he could hear but could not see. In Carter’s barking, I could hear his stress, his fear. He was alarmed. I moved my car a bit and asked my nephew if we could somehow move Viktor to an area farther away while remaining helpful with his separation issues. 

Then, members of my family, strange people to Carter, came out of the house and onto the porch, within eyesight of my car and within eyesight and earshot of Carter. 

Carter, who last week was greeting all strangers with eagerness, was now barking at everyone, every voice, every sound. At one point, my mom wanted to meet Carter. I figured he’d like the break and the chance for some attention. 

I pulled him out of the crate, let him walk around, shake off, and allowed him to approach my mom. She bent over, and Carter lunged at her hand and gave a pretty serious, injury free, air-snap. It was loud! (and if you want to get technical, it probably could have been labeled a bite by the bite experts) 

I saw it coming, too – just not in time to stop my mom from inviting Carter to interact.

Carter has very few communication skills – they’ve probably been punished away, or he didn’t learn them during play with his litter mates. 

Carter doesn’t turn his head. He doesn’t lick his lips. He doesn’t raise his lips. He doesn’t snarl. He doesn’t growl, he doesn’t give a warning bark. His ears lay back, but they often lay back. He gives you one warning: He (and his eyes) becomes quietly stiff. 

And you have about three seconds. Or less. 

The last time Carter did this behavior was the day I picked him up. He snapped at the vet tech. I attributed it to stress from the move or possibly stress from being in a vet clinic. Vet clinic experiences didn’t hold many happy memories. He hasn’t snapped at anyone, stranger or familiar, since. To the contrary, he’s been quite friendly.

When stressed, he loses confidence. When stressed, he loses the few coping skills he has. 

My Heart Hurts When Dogs Struggle

This is when I want to shout from the rooftops: SOCIALIZE YOUR PUPPY! Teach them that people are not scary. Stranger dogs aren’t always scary. Noise isn’t scary. New places are not scary. 

I want to shake people: STOP SENDING YOUR PUPPIES TO NEW HOMES TOO SOON! They need their litter mates and their mom for a few more weeks. They must learn how to communicate and understand communication. STOP TELLING A DOG TO STOP USING THEIR COMMUNICATION SKILLS. They will. They will just choose more intense ones. 

I want to drill into people’s heads: PROVIDE PUPPIES WITH SAFE LEARNING EXPERIENCES – PROBLEM-SOLVING, ADAPTABILITY, RECOVERY. Invest in a good puppy-rearing program or find a good mentor to teach you how to raise well-adjusted puppies.

No one in my community regrets having a rescued dog that has “issues.” They love their dogs, issues and all, and go to great lengths to help their dogs navigate the day-to-day.  Most wish their dog didn’t have to struggle so, and I guess that’s when my heart breaks into bits. Dogs shouldn’t have to struggle.

Otis has poor coping skills – all of which can be attributed to early rearing experiences, or lack thereof. His deficits to a well-adjusted dog limit my activity as a caregiver and there is an impact on my wallet. He has a hard time with new. I can’t board him for long periods. I can’t take him with me when I travel. He’s anxious around the unfamiliar. I love him to the bone and do not regret him being in my life; I’m saddened that he struggles with certain events, circumstances, and in certain environments.

I’m saddened that Carter will have fewer applications for adoption because he has more narrow criteria for a best-fit family. He’s such a loving dog, smart and fun. But his lack of coping skills makes him a more challenging placement. He deserved to have better experiences as a puppy; he’d be a more well-adjusted adult dog and easier to place. While I know he WILL find that perfect home for him, I can certainly wish that his journey was different. 

Back To The Familiar

At the end of the day, Carter, Otis, and I returned home to the familiar. I took Carter out of the car first. He gathered his bearings, realized where he was, and bounded up the back steps to the door. He jumped and pawed at the door, came halfway down the steps to meet me and encourage me to hurry up the steps and let him inside. I’ve never seen a dog (who loves the outdoors) more excited to go inside than Carter was at that moment. 

He immediately checked on his bedding, his bowls, and his toys, then commenced with a prolonged zoomie around the house.

We returned to routine immediately; it was time for dinner and afterward we did our scheduled stroll around the yard. My activity was routine, too. They needed to see me following my routine, too. 

The next day was more of the familiar. That wasn’t hard to do, I was exhausted mentally and physically from the day before. The dogs and I did nothing new, nothing different, a very low-key, low-schedule day. Returning to normal. Both Otis and Carter were more needy of my attention, and only a tish more given; reassurance that all was OK. 

And we were on to another day. 

 

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  1. I am sorry Carter had a difficult day. And yes it is so hard to see our dogs struggle. Glad that he bounced back so quickly once you returned home. I am sure he will find the right home.

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