
When I talk about rescue with non-rescuers, one of the things I hear most often is, I couldnt do it. Id want to keep all the dogs.
Guess what? All rescuers feel the same way. Ive never rescued or fostered a dog that I didnt want to keep. I cry every time I deliver a dog to his/her new family. (Heck, I even get attached to the dogs that come in for surgery at the clinic where I volunteer.)
If youre going to be a rescuer, you need to understand this: Its About The Dog. And in a homeless dogs process of regaining quality of life, your role as rescuer (or foster) is limited. Youre Mary Poppins, blown in by the East Wind to save the dayand blown out when things are set aright.
Because there are other families that need her. Other situations that need a-righting. From this perspective, how selfish of the Banks children to ask her to stayand how selfish of her if she did stay. Tears notwithstanding (not just the childrens but her own), she opens her umbrella and flies away.
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| Embrace your inner Mary Poppins. Just a spoonful of sugar makes the medicine go down, the medicine go dow-own, the medicine go down... |
In 2014, the last A-to-Z Challenge this blog participated in, the theme was Lessons In Life From Dogs. Dogs are the original Zen teachersand nowhere is this most evident than in rescue. The origin of suffering is attachment, says the Buddhas second noble truth. Us humans tend to equate love with attachment (this, and not moneyPink Floyd notwithstandingis the source of all evil today), but working with dogs you learn, willingly or otherwise, that love is about letting go.
Dont misunderstand me; this isnt about not caring, hardening your heart and feeling nothing. (Youll be an epic failure at rescuing if you do that. Dogs can read you like a carnival fortune-teller.) What it is about is understanding the temporal nature of your relationship with that dog. And, maybe more importantly, the purpose of this relationship.
Youve done the hard work; youve taken him/her off the street, youve brought him/her to safety: to the land of medical care and vaccines and people who give a f*ck. If youre a foster, youve helped them heal, youve put their bodiesand their soulsback together. And yet, the most important thing youll do for this dogyour culminating achievementwill be allowing him/her to find the place where s/he belongs.
Every dog needs (and deserves) a family of their own. A packof two, of fifteen, doesnt matter; its not about numbers but about how well the members fit together. Sometimes that pack turns out to be yours (oh, happy day!). But make sure this isnt something youre doing for yourself. Or, in fact, for anyone other than the dog.

Its About The Dog.
If youre a parent, this will sound familiar. You love your kids to bitsbut would you forbid them to go to college, get married, move away and build their own lives? No. (Well, I hope not.)
Let them go. Open your umbrella and go find the next dog who needs you. There arent many Mary Poppinses in the world. Not many people can rescue, or foster. Once your job is done with this dog, you have a responsibility to the next one. (This is, incidentally, why a foster who adopts the dog theyre fostering is called a failed foster.)
Theres a dog out there waiting for your help. Dont let them down.
Thank you so much for the visit, yall. Tomorrow its back to practicalities, with a post on medication and treatment for dogs living in the street.
