The quiet math of looking twice at a senior
I wake up before the sun, my feet finding the cold floor by the reading chair before I even register the hour. My first motion is the same every morning.
8 posts in rescue dog life.
I wake up before the sun, my feet finding the cold floor by the reading chair before I even register the hour. My first motion is the same every morning.
I watch the back door from the kitchen island, waiting for the sound of tires on gravel. When a new senior foster like the one I have now arrives, I do not believe in grand entrances or chaotic introductions.
I have learned that the first hour of a senior rescue journey defines the tone for the entire transition. When Pickle first arrived from the shelter, I did not want to be running to a store while he was trying to understand the scent of my hallway rug runner.
I do not believe in loud arrivals for a new rescue dog. I prefer a quiet entry, where the only sound is the rhythmic click of paws on the hallway runner as we move from the front door to the kitchen.
I do not believe in throwing a massive party for a new rescue dog. I believe in a readable house, a soft voice, and a week with fewer variables than most people think they need.
I do not believe in loud events for senior dogs who spent years in a crate. When I bring a foster like Pickle to a meet-and-greet, I prefer the edges of the room.
Pickle is a senior cocker spaniel with an internal clock that does not seem to understand the concept of a nap. He is currently pacing the length of my rug runner for the tenth time this hour, his claws clicking a frantic rhythm against the hardwood.
I do not believe in loud introductions for a senior rescue, so I kept the house dim and the back door clear. Pickle the senior cocker spaniel arrived with a heavy sigh and a tail that barely tapped the rug runner.