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LETTER
TO MY DOG by W Bruce Cameron
Dear Dog:
Since you seem to have so much trouble processing the English language, no matter
how loudly it is spoken to you, I thought perhaps I could communicate with you
more effectively if I wrote down my thoughts.
First, please allow me to assure you that you are not starving. In fact, if the
newspapers bothered to publish a canine version of those irritating "body-mass
indices" that my daughter so delights in reading aloud to me, I'm sure we
would discover that you've got far more waddle in your walk than is strictly
necessary.
The way you visually track every bite of food I take, with a trembling expression
of frantic pleading, is most annoying.
Speaking of walks: We've been taking the same route locally for nine years. For
you to sob, whine, and tremble every time I get out your lead is just crazy.
And would you please stop rolling in road kill? Dead animals smell like ... well,
like dead fish. There is a reason I give you a bath every single time you roll
in something, it is NOT a coincidence.
Here's a news flash: Our next-door neighbors LIVE THERE. They have a right to
be in their own garden! Stop barking at them through our windows! Your crazed
fury is especially irritating in view of the fact that when you actually encounter
them in person you flop on your back and let them rub your tummy. As a guard
dog, you're about as intimidating as a gerbil.
The following are not digestible: Balloons. Crayons. Socks. I can show you evidence
out in the yard. Stop eating them; they are not food!
I do not mind rolling down the window for you when we are in the car. I don't
even mind that the air rushing up your nostrils makes you sneeze. What I do mind
is that you always pull your head into the car to share your sneeze with the
back of my neck. Keep your head in or out, that's all I ask.
Our front door is three inches of solid wood; you cannot tunnel through it. Stop
clawing! Don't we always let you out when you need to go?
The bushes in the back garden cost a lot of money, but there is nothing of value
hidden under them. Stop digging for buried treasure!
The stuff in the rubbish bin is not your food. Oh, and your expression of shocked
innocence when we accuse you of dining at the garbage buffet is not nearly as
persuasive as the forensic evidence left strewn around the kitchen. Stop blaming
the cat; she doesn't eat anything that costs less than a dollar an ounce.
Oh, and speaking of the cat, just because she gets to sleep on the bed doesn't
mean that you do, too. Did you think we wouldn't notice all the dog fur on our
bedspread when we got home?
And another thing: I do not wake up at the same time every day! On days we don't
work, we're allowed to sleep past our normal waking time. Stop licking my face
because your internal clock says it is time for breakfast. Don't dogs DO weekends?
Look, you do make me crazy sometimes. But I suppose I have to admit that even
though you're lazy (you probably won't even bother to read this letter!) and
don't seem very bright, you do have your positive attributes.
You're the only one in the family who will get up and pace with me in front of
the window when it's past curfew and my teenage daughter is parked in the driveway
with her boyfriend. You're the only one who likes my cooking, and you share my
opinion that we don't need a cat. After nine years of living with you, I suppose
life just wouldn't be the same without you.
Wanna go for a walk?
Copyright 2003 W. Bruce Cameron
www.wbrucecameron.com
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