Wags n’ Words

Dog Walking & Pet Care – Seattle, WA

Monthly Archives: May 2011

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May 20, 2011

And the Angles Sang…

Uh, Rubin?

Yes?

I think you meant to spell it “angels” as in those wispy translucent heavenly things that sing beautiful from up above.

No, I meant to say “angles.”

Oh.

Just be patient and you’ll read why.

Sorry, I was just worried that you had (another) typo.

Hey, I saw those air quotes around “another!”

Well, Grandma reads this and you know what a stickler she is for mistakes.

Yes, well, she’ll just have to roll with it tonight because I meant to say “angles” in the title. May I continue?

By all means…

And Rubin speaks…

 

Life has been wet around here. Really, really wet. And gray. Days and days and days where the only color that permeated the daylight was a steely, wet gray. Even the green trees were muted, the flowers rather dingy, and our hopes for any kind of warmth washed down the gutters day after day after day after day.

And then Gretchen lost her camera battery charger and we were without any way to photograph our daily adventures. I didn’t think I was that attached to the photographs, but the past two weeks without them have made it difficult to summon the words I’ve needed to describe my work. No photographs has made my blog feel gray and flat and worthy of swirling down a gutter.

But there are angles at work in my life, a geometry of serendipity if you will, and this past two weeks without a camera has made me realize how important that geometry is in my life.

Let me back up a bit. If you know me, then you know that I am a pooch of routine. When the routine changes, I don’t adjust very quickly or very willingly. I fuss. I tantrum. I get all nervous in the tummy and consequently I whine. Sometimes I refuse to eat. So one of the ways I’ve tried to adjust to the shiftiness of every day life (for that is what it is, shifty) is to understand the geometry of my existence.

Wallace Stegner wrote a book about the “angle of repose,” which if you are unaware, is the phrase used to describe the steepest angle of descent on a slope when the material on the slope is on the verge of sliding. I’ve used this metaphor in my life often and have created my own geometric angle of comfort — a way to keep myself from sliding into anxiety by placing my body at places in the house where I am equi-distant from all the important things in my life.

Gretchen is one of those. Ann, too. The front door is important as is the back. Of late I’ve had to recalculate because for a long time food wasn’t important to me, but now that I am eating like a real dog (finally) both my food bowl and the cupboard (and fridge as well) where my food is kept is in my equation. If Ann is in the TV room correcting papers and Gretchen is at the computer writing, I am at the apex of our triangle, with my front side facing them and my back side to the food cupboard or one of the doors.

Our house allows me to have a clear line of sight from the front door to the back, so often I’ll lie in the hallway with my nose pointed at the apex of our triangle. When I’m outside, it’s a bit trickier, but I’m pretty adept at keeping my sights out for squirrels, one eyeball on Gretchen’s hand in her pocket (where my training rewards are kept), and my nose lifted in the air (or to the ground) so I can pick up the informative scents around me.

Wednesday night, for instance, we went to the local farmer’s market where half the city was wandering around with their reusable bags buying new potatoes, dark green kale, and homemade cheeses. Crowds make me nervous so I do my best to keep an eye on my moms at the same time keeping myself alert to little children running up to me to pet my curly head or adult feet stepping on my tender toes. When I’m out in the world, the geometric calculations I must make are rapid fire and ever-shifting, but over the years, I’ve gotten pretty good at it. Occasionally I slide down the slope and bark nervously at the kid on the skateboard or the man who laughs too loud, but everyone agrees, I’ve gotten better.

It’s all because of the math.

Anyway, you may ask, what does all of this have to do with each other — the weather, the math, the lack of a camera, the odd title of this blog?

It’s kind of hard to explain, but let me give it a try. There are many things in my life that require me to do the math. My little labradoodle brain is always figuring out angles and degrees and necessary positions I need to be in in order to feel balanced and complete. I am, after all, in charge of my reactions (to a point) and so I work very hard every day figuring out the geometry of my contentment. It’s a lot of hard work.

But there are things in my life over which I have very little or absolutely no control — the rain, the speeding teenager on the skateboard, the lost battery charger, etc. etc. When life throws these unexpected, uncontrollable events at me, I feel my angles sliding down the hillside and there’s nothing I can really do to stop the material of my life from sliding down with it. I get distraught. I pace. I shake. I am unable to really settle down and this is, frankly, quite exhausting.

Needless to say, the past two weeks have been a slope of unexpected, uncontrollable uncertainties and I have spent each day and late into the evenings calculating the angle of repose — that delicate place where I might stay balanced on the hillside of my life without slipping in a direction that feels erratic and incalculable. First there was the rain and the gray and the cold, cold days of misery followed by the lost battery charger and the subsequent inability to take photos (though taking photos would have been difficult with all the rain). It was as if those two events — the weather and the lack of photos — threw all my calculations into some kind of alternate universe where no matter how I measured the angles, I was slipping.

And then this week rolled around. Monday it rained and was windy and I found myself grumbling and threatening to pull out my protractor to avoid any slipping down the slope of my life. We searched and searched for a battery charger (from store to store to store) and eventually ordered one online crossing our paws that it was the right one and would, in fact, solve all of our problems.

Then Tuesday unfolded and the sun peeked around a cloud and asked, “Is this where I am needed the most?” And I yelled up to the sky and said, “Yes, yes, yes…please, please stay. You are so needed here!” And by Tuesday afternoon, as I was lying on the back porch soaking up the long lost sun, I felt the angles vibrate a bit, the degrees shift ever-so slightly and I sighed, long and deep, but not completely freely lest I scare the delicate balance of the repose.

Wednesday — more sun and this time a warm sun and it stayed all day long. And we hunted rabbits and we swam in the lake and I found myself panting from the heat, I felt a bounce back in my step, and that anxiety deep in my chest was slowly melting.

And then the angles sang — bright and clear and with such resonance — when the UPS driver pulled up and dropped off a small box. THE BATTERY CHARGER! We ripped open that box (yes, I helped), put the battery in, plugged it into the wall, and the angles raised their voices in such a crescendo I thought for certain the windows in the house would shatter.

“We’re back in business!” Gretchen said and I danced around the house hooting and a-hollering like never before.

Thursday afternoon — we took photos. Hundreds of them. We took photos of silly things and beautiful things and things that were neither beautiful or silly but simply solid and there and missed by our camera. And on Thursday the sun still shone and the temperature was that much warmer and the chorus of angles surrounded us like a tabernacle wherever we went, whatever we did.

On Friday, my geometric brilliance was in full swing and in a split second I could figure out the angle of comfort whether I was in the house with both moms or out at work with one mom and three other dogs. And again, more sunshine and more warmth and I knew I would be alright.

Do you get it now, Gretchen? The title — And the Angles Sang?

Yes, Rubin. I get it and you’re right, I felt it too. But I hate to tell you this…

Uh oh…

It’s not horrible, it’s just that the rain is returning.

(Silence)

Rubin?

Give me a sec, okay? I’m doing some calculations.

Okay…

It’s going to be okay.

It is? Why?

Well, we have the battery charger, right?

Yes…

And the rain isn’t going to be as awful and cold and torrential as it has been, right?

No, I don’t think so…

Then I think the angles are going to keep singing…maybe not as loudly, but we’ll still be able to hear them.

Whew…

Precisely!

Until next week — hold onto your angles!

Rubin


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May 15, 2011

My Life Without Photographs

I was reading in the New York Times the other day that the more we tell a story, the more we change the details. In other words, the truest representation of the “facts” of an event are when we tell the story the first time. After that,the details all get murkier and murkier or, as is the case with most humans, more and more

Two years ago it was warm enough in May that I got to swim in my own little pool!

embellished and exaggerated.

This is, I suppose, why humans take so many photographs. Or at least, that’s my theory. They know, even if they don’t want to admit it, that their memories are malleable and impermanent. A photograph, they think, will sear the details into something tangible and solid, something not so illusive and annoyingly deceptive as memory.

This is also why, I suppose, Gretchen is so upset that 1) she still hasn’t found her camera battery charger and 2) has had a very difficult time locating one. In fact, we’ve been to parts of this city I never knew existed searching for the battery charger that appears to be no longer in use.

Last year it was so warm in May, Tyson actually panted. He rarely pants!

I find this very perplexing.  We bought the camera only 2 years ago and for some reason, the batteries, which I might add are exactly the same as the current model of the camera, require a special kind of charger and while camera shops around town might have the batteries, they don’t have the chargers. This makes absolutely no sense to me (or to Gretchen, for that matter) and so we’ve resorted to trying to purchase one online.

But this has proven difficult as well because the exact model must fit “H” type batteries and while we can find an abundance of chargers that fit A B C D E F G and I, we struggled to find H. Go figure.

But this has also proven to make my life (and my work) feel rather empty of late. Every morning I get up, put on my leash, and head out the door in anticipation of meeting up with my canine clients. I know there are some past photographs where I look bored with the whole “posing” scenario and I know our computer contains over 20,000 photographs (most of me and my friends), but I kind

Rosie pants, but last year's May was really pant-worthy!

of miss reviewing my week in pictures.

And what, then, does NOT recording my life in photographs do to my memories of the past week? How does an absence of digital photographic evidence alter the stories I tell?

These are the questions I’m pondering and while you see photos of the dogs we walked this week on this blog, please know they are

only representations. They do not, by any means, capture this week’s stories/memories that ranged from thrilling to annoying, glorious sunny to miserably rainy. No photos of soggy dogs hunched together under the umbrella of a cedar tree or happy pupssplashing in the lake on our one warm, sunny day. No photos of me sleeping, no photos of my friends romping, no photos of the spring flowers or the snowy (yes, still snowy) mountains. No photos of rain dripping from every surface and corner or the brief, but glorious sun shimmering off of the puddles (and poodles).

For the fear that I might alter these memories past the point of recognition, I am refraining from telling the stories lest the details morph or transpose themselves into something not quite as pure and remembered as each day of my life. Instead, I will hold these stories behind the squinted eyes of my memory and hope that soon the correct camera battery charger comes in the mail  so that I might capture the beauty of my life frame by frame.

Cross your paws everyone!

Rubin

PS: Here are more photos of May not circa-2011…

Woobie panting underneath her long locks!

No panting, but flowers in bloom. We have flowers now, but the rain is rolling off of them!

Two years ago, it was warm enough that we could do some water therapy with Monty who sinks like a boulder, by the way!

But Gretchen and I helped him and he swam like a champ!

May 2010 had sunshine. You can tell by the shadows.

In addition to panting, Rosie is squinting in the sun. Remember those days?

We actually met Roux in the month of May last year. We don't have many photos of her, though.

We walked to lots of sunny places in previous Mays so we could stick out our tongues at the camera!

And yes, I got to do lots of swimming during a much warmer, drier May!

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May 8, 2011

Lost

The trouble with the sun is that it gets lost.

You’d think, over years and years and years of following relatively the same path, the sun would know its way around the earth, but I’ve come to realize that this is

There was a time...

not the case. Traveling from east to west isn’t as easy as it may first appear. There are distractions, apparently, along the way — thunderstorms, hurricanes, cloud cover, and the occasional rendezvous with the moon for an eclipse every now and then.

In our case, living in the Pacific Northwest, the sun can get lost quite easily for the distractions are as plentiful as the stars. I don’t mind it when the sun gets distracted every now and again, but lately, it seems as if the sun has forgotten all about its duties — chiefly, to bring us warmth and happiness by making an appearance every now and again.

So it was this week. Yes, the sun showed up on Wednesday for a brief and glorious time, but Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday through Sunday, it got lost again, wandering off to some distant land like Phoenix (as if they don’t get their fair share of visitations!) and Australia and South Africa. I’m not exactly sure the specifics of the sun’s job description, but I don’t think numerous vacations to warmer climes is part of it.

...when it was warm enough to dangle our feet in the cool waters...

At least, I would hope not. But lately, with all this rain, cold dampness, and lack of bright light in the sky, I’m beginning to wonder.

I don’t know much about getting lost — it’s only happened once or twice in my lifetime — but this week I’ve done a lot of pondering about it because, on top of the sun getting lost, Gretchen seems to have lost her camera battery charger. I’ve watched her again and again scour the house — every bag, every nook and cranny, and inside every shoe (yes every shoe…and there are a lot of them in this house) — looking for the little black plug-in that charges up the two camera batteries and allows us to photograph our weekly events.

When the second battery died on Thursday, Gretchen began her search because not only do the batteries allow us to take pictures, in order to get the pictures we did take off of the camera and onto the computer (and then onto my blog), we need to turn the camera on. Dead batteries = no functioning camera = no photos from the week.

So I apologize for the lack of current visuals on this post, but once we find that charger (or perhaps buy a new one), my words and older pictures of our clients will have to suffice. (I tried to choose older pictures when the sun wasn’t lost…)

...when we could smile and squint into the bright light...

But my point about this all is that watching Gretchen both frantically and calmly (depending on her mood) try to find the charger gave me an idea — perhaps the sun is merely lost because it doesn’t think anyone is looking for it. I mean, when I got lost way back when I was a puppy, the first thing I did when I realized I was no longer connected to my moms and had no clue where I was or where I was headed, I looked up and started searching. I looked everywhere. I even whimpered a bit and though it felt like hours of being lost (it was actually only a few minutes in the woods) what made me find my way home was the sound of my moms’ voices and their desire to be as connected to me as I desired to be connected to them.

So my theory with the sun is that we’ve somehow lost our connection. The sun is out there wandering around and it just can’t hear our voices calling it back home. Maybe this is because no one is calling (we’ve given up hope). Maybe this is because, over time, the sun decided we no longer wanted to be connected and gave up trying to find us or maybe we’ve somehow angered the sun (not enough appreciation, talking smack about it behind its fiery back, taking advantage of it when it does make an appearance?) and the sun has decided to teach us a lesson.

I don’t know, but I’m thinking that if we all wish really hard, if we all look up from our busy lives and call out the sun’s name, it might just find its way back here. You see, I think we have to “reconnect” or at the least, show the sun that we really want to be connected and maybe then the sun will want to connect back up with us.

..when we could look out over the city and enjoy the clear view...

..and romp with new friends (Roux) on green pastures...

This may not work, but I know I’m going to try really hard in this upcoming week to call the sun’s name and search for it wherever I go. If you all agree to do the same, it just might work. Will you join me?

(And maybe, while you’re at it, you can call out the battery charger’s name, too…I have a feeling that both the sun and the charger are vacationing in Mexico! But it’s worth a try!)

Thanks for your help,

Rubin

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April 29, 2011

Hung Out to Dry

Gretchen wears a really funny outfit when she’s at work in the pool. It’s called a dry suit and she says she feels like Lloyd Bridges in “Sea Hunt” (don’t worry, I had to look it up, too!).

Hold on a second, Rubin!

What? What did I say that was wrong?

You didn’t say anything wrong, but that outfit isn’t what I wear in the pool.

Well, you said, Lloyd Bridges in “Sea Hunt” and I looked it up and this was the photo I found. What’s different?

Well, for starters, mine is not as tight-fitting as his.

Oh. Is that a big deal?

Kind of because I don’t want people thinking of me in something so…so well, revealing?

How’s it revealing? His whole body is covered?

Yeah, but it fits like skin and it’s the same color as his flesh and it looks like he’s not really wearing anything.

You humans are so weird. And modest. I told everyone right at the beginning of this post that it was a suit and that it reminded you of Lloyd Bridge’s suit. I didn’t say, “Hey everyone, Gretchen wears this skin-tight almost naked looking thing when she works. Take a look!” And I didn’t post a photo of you dressed in the actual “Sea Hunt” suit.

True, and I thank you for that, it’s just that it felt a bit revealing.

Now that we’ve cleared it up, can I continue?

Sure. Sorry. I just wanted to be clear that that’s not me in the photo.

That seems pretty obvious to me!

Hey, what are you saying?

Oh dog, here we go again. Relax. I was just saying that that’s some old guy in a tight-fitting suit with bad hair and an arrogant attitude (my attempt at appeasing her!) so I didn’t think anyone would get the wrong idea.

Thank you. Continue.

So where was I?

I wear a dry suit in the pool.

Yes, thank you…so when Gretchen comes home, sometimes she brings this suit home with her to really rinse it down and then she hangs it up to dry only the suit is so big…

Excuse me, Rubin…I don’t mean to interrupt again, but perhaps you could say “tall” and not “big?”

Oy…only the suit is really TALL and so it’s hard to find a place to hang it. Sometimes she stretches it out in the basement and sometimes she stretches it out in the bathroom but to really dry it out (and air it out, too)…

Wait…are you implying something about the smell?

You are really sensitive today, aren’t you?

I suppose, but I worry that the suit does smell at times and I was just wondering if it was my imagination or if you smelled it, too.

I have a very keen sense of smell, so yes, I smell it (what a silly question)

That’s not what I mean. I mean, does it smell bad?

How would I know? I don’t classify things into bad smelling and good smelling…you know that! In fact, I wrote about that last year!

So, if I’m sensitive today, you seem a bit grumpy…

Well, if you’d let me continue, I think our readers will find out why I’m a bit unnerved.

Sorry…continue…

No more interruptions?

I’ll try…

So the other day, without my knowledge, Gretchen decided to hang the suit outside.

Sorry to interrupt again…

Yes?

I hung it outside because it was finally NOT raining and I thought the fresh air would do the suit some good.

True…we actually had sun that day, which is why I wanted to go outside and sleep in the sun on the porch in my favorite spot. So…(pausing here to make certain I’m not interrupted again!) I stood at the back door, waited for Gretchen to open it for me (what I’d give for some opposable thumbs!), and when she did, I stepped through the door…

…only to be frightened half out of my curls by a large, towering figure (sorry, I mean TALL, towering figure…though that seems a big redundant) looming over me as I headed to the sunny spot.

Why are you laughing, Gretchen?

You have to admit, in hindsight, it was pretty funny.

Odd, what do you find so funny about my overwhelming fear?

Well, from my perspective, the look on your face, the way you jumped sideways with your whole body, and then the howling bark that emerged from your belly, it made me laugh.

Wow. How sensitive of you. I’m shaking in my poodle-ness and you’re giggling at me.

Not AT you…more like giggling at the situation.

I’m so happy I can bring you such joy in your sad and dark life…

My life isn’t sad and dark…certainly not with you in it!

Is that supposed to make me feel better?

Oh Rubin…I’m sorry my BIG suit scared you hanging at the side of the house. I never intended to make your curls stand on end. It was just a confluence of events and unfortunately, you were in the wrong place at the wrong moment. Does it make you feel any better to know that Ann jumped and gasped in the same way you did when she stepped through the door on her way to the garbage can?

She did?

Yep, and I think she jumped farther sideways than you did!

Did she bark at it?

No, but she gave me an earful about not warning her.

Okay, it makes me feel a bit better…but the whole point of this story has to do with the weather, not the suit.

Really? How?

It’s been cold lately…

Darn cold! 36 degrees just this morning.

And wet.

Some parts of the city even got snow this week…wet snow, that is.

So my point is that when the sun came out, when the porch warmed up and the blue skies spread out above me and we walked without rain gear and multiple layers, I realized how much I wanted to be like that suit…

Really? How?

I felt a need to be hung out to dry, to soak up the warmth, dry myself out…

…get rid of the smell?

Hey! Do you think I smell?

Like a dog, which in my book is a very good thing.

You’re just trying to make me feel better after scaring me half to death with that suit of yours.

Perhaps, but mostly the little hints of spring have helped erase my dark mood of late and giving me hope that we’ll be able to swim together in the lake soon…

Ya think?

Well, eventually…

But we haven’t even seen the turtles yet…you know, the turtles that bask in the sun on the log by the lake?

I know, we’ve been watching for them, but so far, no turtles.

I guess that will be the true sign of warmer times…

What will be?

When the turtles hang themselves out to dry.

Good point, buddy, good point.

Have a great weekend everybody!

Rubin

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