advertisement
On The Insider: Wanna Meet Miley?
Find Articles in:
all
Business
Reference
Technology
News
Sports
Health
Autos
Arts
Home & Garden
advertisement

Content provided in partnership with
ProQuest

Virginia Ironside's Dilemmas

Independent, The (London),  May 5, 2008  by Virginia Ironside

Dear Virginia, My much-loved dog died nine months ago, and after a while I thought it might be a good idea to get a new one. But now I've got one, I really can't bear it. After three weeks with him, I feel I'm about to have a breakdown. I can't go anywhere, and he's yapping and peeing all the time. The thought of another 15 or so years of this seems intolerable. Would it be mean to give him to someone else? Yours sincerely, Natalie

I don't know if you know, Natalie, of a syndrome called the "frog in the pot". The thinking behind it is that, if you throw, heaven forbid, a frog into a pan of boiling water, he will spring out immediately. But if you put a frog into a pan of cool water, then slowly bring it to the boil, he will simply fall asleep and die.

Most Popular Articles in News
The Ten Best Laptop bags
Tata plans cheapest-ever car for Indian market
GLOBALIZATION AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF UNDERDEVELOPMENT OF THE THIRD WORLD
Corn is good for you; Corn is not only a tasty treat, but also a cereal that ...
THE 50 BEST STYLISH HANDBAGS TO CARRY
More »
advertisement

When you had your first dog, you slowly became used to all the constraints that dog-owning put on you. You gradually accustomed yourself to the long walks your dog required, to the fact that you either couldn't go out as much as you used to, or you brought the yapping terror along with you, albeit constantly fearful that it would leave hairs on your friend's sofa. You had found someone who could care for it when you went on holiday, and as you had got used to it, it had got used to you, knowing, in some strange way, that perhaps it wasn't wise to wake you too early on Sundays, understanding that supper came only at six every evening, and so on. You grew into each other, like an old married couple.

But having had nine months without a dog, you've been without those pressures. You are free as a bird, you can go to the theatre six nights running if you so wish (well, you never know, you might be one of those people who like that kind of thing) without feeling guilty about the lonely, whimpering mite back home. You can sail off for the weekend without wondering whether your hosts have cats, or whether you'd better leave the dog behind. Who knows, perhaps your friends feel a certain relief, too, since your presence is not always encumbered by the pitter-patter of paws.

Small wonder, then, that when it suddenly all starts again, 24 hours a day, with a tiny, untrained (it sounds) puppy, it's far worse than it might have been if you'd got a new dog straight away after the last one's death. While you coped with the restrictions before as a result of years of habit and training, now it all appears like a prison sentence in Guantanamo Bay.

Natalie, give it away. And give it away at once. Obviously, it's essential to find an owner who is kind, loving, has a huge garden and preferably other dogs, but give it away you must. The longer you keep it, the more unfair it will be not only on you - because I'm sure you will feel some loss when it goes, even if mixed with relief - but also on the dog. It's young and, at this stage, can settle down happily with a new owner. Wait six months, and it will have bonded with you and feel very unhappy being dumped on someone else, however kind.

It's true that a puppy is not just for Christmas, as they say, and anyone who takes on a dog should be prepared for eight to 15 years of dog-slavery, but dogs aren't people. Dogs do allow you a little bit of leeway, a few weeks in which you can change your mind.

Don't think twice about it. Not only would keeping the dog make you unhappy, but what fun would it be for him having you as a mistress, seething, day in and day out, with resentment?

Readers say

YOUVE MADE A MISTAKE

Phone the RSPCA. You were on the rebound from grief and made a mistake by buying a dog that you can't love like your previous one. But you did buy him, and have a responsibility to him. Don't abandon him or pass him on to a friend or relative. The RSPCA will find a family that can give him the care he needs. It's not his fault, so do right by him.

Ian Laird

Birkenhead, Wirral

DONT FEEL GUILTY

A dog may be for life, but it doesn't have to be your life, Natalie. Your past successful experience of keeping a dog proves that it is only changed circumstances that make you less tolerant now; your happy stint as a caring owner will stand you in good stead when it comes to swiftly finding another home for him.

Unlike children, dogs can be sent back, and you should feel no guilt about acknowledging your feelings and acting upon them to restore your sanity.

Dinah Ellis

Weymouth, Dorset

HELL BE FINE

Please don't despair. It is an awful time. I know, because I felt just like you when we had a new puppy. I seriously contemplated trying to find him another home. Two years down the line, that same puppy is a simply wonderful dog and much loved. But if you really can't cope and decide to find your puppy another home, please don't beat yourself up over it. Dogs live in the moment. He will be fine!

Shelley Wagstaff

Hebden Bridge

GET HIM TRAINED

This new puppy lets you see a dog as non-dog-lovers see it. Do you want or need the benefits of your pet's companionship? Probably you do. Now is the time to join puppy-training and obedience classes, which will turn your dog into a friend who will fit in with your life and bring you joy. Your friends will admire you and your obedient dog. They won't think much of you if you abandon it.