Lessons About Life from a Lost Dog

I always thought it would be hard when something happened to
Zack, our 9-year-old Golden Retriever. He was
well-mannered, loving, gorgeous, and truly a “member” of our
family. What I didn’t anticipate was how soon something
would happen, or just how hard it would be.
Although my parents had Collies as pets, dogs were never
allowed in the house. Things were different for Zack and
my own family, however. We not only let him in, we took
him with us on rides, hikes, school picnics, church programs,
and just about anywhere else a dog was allowed. Although
rather rambunctious as a puppy, Zack eventually settled down
and matured into what my husband called the “Elder
Statesman”. With his graying muzzle and friendly ways,
Zack found his way into the hearts of just about everyone he
met.
I remember the day Zack disappeared as though it was
yesterday. He went for a little tromp in the woods with
our other dog, and simply didn’t come back. We live in
the country, and there is a stream not too far from our house
where the dogs loved to wade. There were also deer to
chase, and a small pond nearby where, if the dogs were lucky,
they could scare up a Canada goose. Sometimes I wish we
had put up a fence for the dogs, but they loved to run and we
hadn’t had any problems.
It was late in the day when I got home from work and found
out that Zack was gone. My husband had to leave for work,
so I sent my two teenage boys through the woods in a circle,
calling in vain for Zack. But our beloved retriever, aka
Zackie, Sad Zack, and a zillion other fond little names, never
came home. We posted pictures all over, offered a reward,
combed through the woods, banged on doors and called every vet
and animal shelter in the area not once but many times—but
never did find our “puppy”.
It’s been 8 months now since we lost Zack, and our family
has learned a lot from the experience. We all grieved in
different ways. I cried for what seemed like a whole
week. My husband felt like a black cloud was hanging over
our house. My sons didn’t shed any tears that I saw, yet
I caught them tromping aimlessly through the woods more than
once, and both were willing participants in the many rides we
took looking for Zack. Through it all, I feel like I
learned some very interesting things.
Lesson #1: Others Could Share Our
Pain
Through this experience, I have learned that there are an
awful let of dog lovers out there. People I don’t even
know share my pain, for many of them, like me, have lost a
beloved pet. I have been a dog lover for as long as I can
remember. As a child, when I was in trouble with the rest
of the world, I would often literally go into the “doghouse”
with our Collie. He was always glad to see me, and no
matter how unloved I might have felt at the moment, he never
seemed to care. I always knew that I loved dogs, and that
others did too. But I was amazed at the depth of emotion
people showed when I told them about Zack. As much as
losing him hurt, it helped to know that others cared and
connected with what we were going through.
Lesson #2: It’s Amazing What You Will Do for
Your Dog!
I hate knocking on doors. I hate meeting people I
don’t know, and I certainly don’t like sharing my emotional
pain with a stranger. Yet this is exactly what I had to
do while looking for Zack. If somebody reported a dog
that might have been Zack, I hurried over to the neighborhood
with flyers and made the rounds. I was completely out of
my comfort zone, but at that point, really didn’t care.
Lesson #3: This Could Be Much
Worse!
I would never minimize the pain of losing a pet. Yet
one night as we were talking about Zack and how much we missed
him, my husband said something that really struck home.
“Losing a dog is so terrible—but think how people must feel
when their child is missing!” We just heard on the news
about those poor parents whose girl disappeared on her senior
class trip. We were starting to understand what it meant
to have lack of closure, to accept that we might never know
what happened. This seemed like a very difficult thing
for us—and yet, as sad as we were over Zack, it would be so
much worse in the case of a missing child. And I really
began to feel empathy for others who had a loss with no closure
in ways I could never have fathomed before.
Lesson #4: You Never Stop Looking
Just this week, a friend told me she saw a dog running by
the side of the road about 5 miles from here—a dog that looked
just like Zack. He was an older Golden Retriever, male,
with graying muzzle. I wish with all my heart she would
have stopped and picked him up, but she said she couldn’t—she
was taking her Dad to the doctor and just couldn’t do it.
So today I found myself in a nearby post office, posting a
flyer about Zack once again, and explaining the situation to
yet one more sympathetic postmaster. In the health food
store, I met a lady who once again shared my pain. She
had lost a pet monkey in Brazil. She said they traced him
for blocks and blocks—but the trail finally left off at a bus
stop and they never saw him again.
It seems like a slim chance that we will ever find
Zack. My husband has given up, so I’m the only one
looking. Yet when I called once acquaintance who lives
where the golden was sighted, she confirmed that there had
indeed been an older male Golden Retriever in their yard just a
few weeks month ago. He was a large male, with a graying
muzzle--a very nice dog, she said. I don’t know if that
dog, or the other ones like him that I have missed by just a
few hours, are Zack. In some ways, life has got to go
on.
We have a new dog now, a gorgeous stray Golden Retriever /
Saint Bernard mix that somebody thought might be Zack.
The people who found him said he was too nice to take to the
pound, but they already had three dogs. We fell in love
with him right away, and he’s now an important part of our
family. But somewhere, deep in my heart, there’s a
special place that only one grand “Elder Statesman” can
fill. Which is why, when someone nearby says they saw a
gorgeous older male golden wandering around, I still go looking
for Zack.
Copyright 2006 Cari Haus
Cari Haus, CPA and entrepreneur, sells log furniture on her
website, http://www.logcabinrustics.com/
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=C._J._Haus
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