Adopting for the best reason
I have been stalking one particular canine online for about two years now.
I don’t think I’m alone here.
Most canine lovers have their eyes on a certain rescue canine that for whatever reason they really, really want to adopt. typically the deterrent is another family member, but it could also be a lease agreement or possibly the dynamics of the current animals in the house.
I’ve always wanted to adopt a German shepherd mix named Sasha. She has been featured on my blog numerous times – here, here, here and here are just a few ? She is one cool canine still waiting to be adopted because the day I met her in July 2008.
But the fact that I want to adopt Sasha is not the point of this post. I’m writing this because I’ve finally let go of my obsession with adding this particular second canine to our home. It’s actually a bit of a relief for me to admit this.
The reason I can’t adopt Sasha is not because of Josh saying no or my landlord saying no or even my mutt Ace saying no. The reason I can’t adopt her is because I am emotionally attached to her. I want to adopt Sasha for the wrong reasons.
Emotional attachment to animals
Dog lovers have a few issues with emotional attachments, at least I do. The main reason I love dogs so much is because I have a hard time opening up and getting close to people. Likewise, people have a hard time getting close to me.
But dogs? They are all about invading my personal space. They want to be friends instantly, and many of them are very pushy about it!
The people in my life pretend they don’t need to be taken care of, and I do the same. but dogs? They are very, very needy. I really do need to take care of someone in purchase to feel special. Dogs give me this opportunity every single day.
And of course, dogs offer us with unconditional love. Sometimes I tell Ace, “Get over here and meet my emotional needs.” then he places himself in front of me and waits for a big hug. What a good young boy ?
This canine is implied to be mine!
We humans have the tendency to fall in love with an animal based on its picture. maybe the canine reminds us of a previous or current dog. maybe the canine has a certain look on its face.
Once we’re emotionally attached to a dog, it’s easy to forget about the other, slightly much more essential details such as the dog’s energy, age, personality, tolerance of other animals and level of training. We tend to set ourselves up for extra tension best along with our family members, animals and the new dog.
In his book “A canine Year,” Jon Katz writes about how he goes to pick up a rescued border collie from the airport. even though he’d agreed to adopt the dog, he specifically asked not to see its picture first. He didn’t want to make an adoption decision based on looks. That would be a bad reason, he said, to get a dog.
But people adopt dogs based on looks all the time.
Humans also have the ability to attach particular events to a particular animal and draw outlandish conclusions that this canine is implied to be theirs.
Sasha was officially the first canine I took on a running session after I started my canine running business, Run That Mutt. This is what result in my emotional attachment. On top of that, she was a rescue canine desperately in need of exercise and attention. She was very needy.
Over the next year and a half, I took Sasha on many, numerous runnings sessions. I took her to obedience classes and adoption events. There was lots of time for car rides and walks. lots of time for bonding. She even spent an afternoon hanging out with Ace, and they got along great despite Sasha’s expected dog-aggression issues.
Sasha was adopted and returned at least four times, even more reinforcing the idea in my head that she was implied to be my dog. If no one wanted her, if no one could train her, possibly I could.
What are the wrong reasons to adopt another dog?
Foster owners are faced with the temptation to adopt their foster dogs simply because it’s been much more than a year and no one seems to want the dogs. I’d say that’s a bad reason to get an animal.
Dog lovers, and especially those of us highly involved in rescue, need to ask ourselves why we want a second (or third, or fourth …) dog. If it’s to temporarily fill some kind of emotional need, then we probably shouldn’t be adopting that dog.
It gives us emotional complete satisfaction to rescue an animal no one else wants. This is why I want to adopt Sasha, and it’s the same reason people want to adopt dogs with some kind of horrible, abusive past.
I worked at the information table at 4 Luv of canine Rescue’s silent auction in October. people came up to me asking for much more info on the puppies recently pulled from a Western North Dakota puppy mill. The rescue had a binder with pictures of each canine up for adoption, and people kept asking, “Is this one from the puppy mill? how about this one?”
They wanted a puppy mill canine or no canine at all!
What are the best reasons to adopt another dog?
Maybe you can tell me?
I have a hard time distinguishing my own feelings between wanting a canine for the best reasons and wanting a canine for the wrong reasons. I am not one of those people who falls in love with every canine she sees. Sasha is the only canine I’ve seriously considered adopting, and I work with rescue dogs constantly. I am very reasonable and realize that no matter what, there will always be much more dogs to rescue. There will always be dogs stuck in the pounds.
Perhaps the most significant red flag for me is that I am only interested in adopting Sasha when there are dozens of much more suitable dogs for my current lifestyle. I am not much different than the people who come flocking to adopt the most recent shelter canine with a media story attached to it (think, the “Vick dogs” or the “Katrina dogs” or much more locally, star the shepherd mix who had her throat slit).
It takes a lot of time, discipline, money and energy to adopt another dog. It also takes a lot of discipline to say no to the wrong dogs and wait for that “perfect” canine to come along.
For me, the best reason to adopt another canine is because all family members are on board to open up our love to another living creature. It’s another chance to grow, challenge ourselves and have fun. It’s a chance to bring ourselves and our other animals much more companionship.
A few years down the road, maybe Josh and I will be ready to adopt a second canine similar to Sasha.
Who knows, maybe the best canine will come along sooner than I think.
Tell me about the rescue canine you’re currently “stocking.” Leave a link in the comments if you’d like.
If you are interested in adopting Sasha, fill out an application with 4 Luv of canine Rescue. maybe 2011 will be her year.
Edit: Sasha was adopted in 2011!