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My husband was
not an animal lover. He came from Barbados a beautiful
island in the Caribbean where animals were always kept
outside the home. Much as I tried, I could not convince him
that in Canada especially if you lived in a big city and it
is wintertime, you just could not keep an animal outside.
Our animals are domesticated. They live in our house along
with the rest of us. But my husband could not differentiate
between, a cow, a cat, or a dog. For him no animal had the
right to live in a house. This seemed to be a cultural
difference that I feared that I might not be able to
overcome. For example, I was never able to get him to try
???escargot??? because once I explained to him that escargot was
really snails all he could think about was the fact that in
Barbados these nasty creatures invaded the bathroom and
crawled around the base of the toilet bowl. There was no way
he was ever going to eat those vile things!
So I feared
that I was never going to have another beloved dog again. I
was the person who had grown up with dogs all my life, the
child who had better relationships with dogs than she did
with her peers, and the adult who longed to continue the dog
lover family that had started long before my birth. I
wanted my young son who was barely three years old at the
time to experience the joy having a dog and I wanted to
create the next generation of ???dog lover??? in my family. But
my husband was of the opposite mind. He did not want to
hear about bringing a dirty scruffy animal into his home.
After many a
discussion about this very matter I finally had convinced
him to allow me to get a dog. The condition was that I
would take complete charge of the dog. He would not lift a
finger to feed it walk it or bath it. It would be my
responsibility to ???do the right thing??? if the dog created
any problem whatsoever. Even though we had different ideas
about what about doing the right thing meant, I agreed. At
last I would have my dog and I was sure that he would
eventually grow to like the dog as well.
In my
zealousness to get a dog I took the first dog that I could
find. My uncle??™s girlfriend had to give away her dog
because the neighbours complained about the dog barking all
the time. I agreed to take the dog. The thought had never
occurred to me that the same thing would happen to us.
Taffy was a beautiful Springer spaniel mix. But she could
not be left alone for even 5 minutes or she would bark non
stop until somebody came home. Both my husband and I worked
all day. We also lived directly on top of the grocery store
that was owned and operated by the landlord himself. I was
told in no uncertain terms that the dog??™s barking was
driving him crazy and chasing away his clients. I had no
choice. I had to do the right thing. I had to find a new
home for Taffy.
Carol Roach
winterose@videotron.ca,
Carol Roach is a
published writer and newsletter editor. You can purchase
her book: Picking Up The Pieces: A Woman's Journey at
www.publishamerica.com, or
www.amazon.com. You can also go to your local bookstore
and order it there as well. If you are interested in other
stories feel free to join her newsletter: Storytime Tapestry
at:
storytime_tapestry-subscribe@yahoogroups.com, or email
her directly at
winterose@videtron.ca and she will be glad to accomodate
you. Carol enjoys email and responds to every inquiry. |