|
The
White Card Dog
Supplied
by Adopt A Pet, P.O. Box 4047, Sima Valley, CA, 93093
The white
card over the door said he was a 2-year-old German Shepherd,
but the four-legged creature occupying the cramped cage was neither
noble, fearless, majestic, nor proud. He was a layer of skin
draped over a skeletal frame. He hadn't even the strength to
lift his head. The offer of a meat tidbit was ignored, the will
to continue existence in a human world had vanished.
Although
he had been placed in a row of cages marked "for adoption",
officials hadn't bothered with inoculations. A dog that no longer
wanted anybody, was insensitive to the flies that feasted upon
his dirty body, could hardly be expected to appeal to visitors
seeking dogs to adopt. He no longer cared. He had no desire to
be anyone's friend. He wasn't waiting to be claimed by anyone
except death. And it seemed as if death wasn't in much of a hurry
either.
I couldn't
help wondering how this dog came into this world. Was he the
result of someone who owned a female and felt she was "entitled"
to have a least one litter? Was he the by-product of a family
educational object lesson? "We felt the kids should see
the miracle of birth.
"Was
he once someone's cute Christmas puppy that was discarded along
with the tinsel and tree? Or was he a training aid, acquired
to teach a child "responsibility"? Perhaps he was once
a status symbol, his usefulness outmoded by changing fads.
Is he
nature's result of a dog allowed to run the streets because of
the mistaken philosophy that "dogs should be free and not
confined"? The person who felt his female was entitled to
have at least on litter should be advised that at least one of
the dogs he felt she was entitled to have, has laid down on the
floor of a cement cage to die - unwanting and unwanted. The parents
who gave their children the benefit of seeing the miracle of
birth didn't complete the lesson. Their children didn't get to
see the miracle of death and how it is slowly putting an end
to this creature they caused to be brought into this world.
The parents
who hoped a new puppy would teach responsibility to their child
should know that the living, breathing being that they gave to
their child has almost breathed his last. Yes, they should have
waited until their child demonstrated his ability to assume responsibility
before placing a life in his hands.
And to
the limp body on that cold cement floor - what can I say to you,
old fellow? What excuses can I offer for the suffering you have
endured? How can I justify your existence? But it really doesn't
matter to you anymore, does it? You don't even feel the ticks
sucking the last vestiges of life from your veins. We don't deserve
to be your best friend, do we boy?
|