- Dare
to Care - The Life You Save May Be Someones Future Pet
- by: Rose De Dan
February 24 is officially Spay
Day USA 2009, an annual campaign of The Humane Society of the
United States to inspire people to save animals lives by spaying
or neutering pets and feral cats.
Originally I thought that I might
republish one of the very first articles I had ever written as
a way to inspire people. In rereading it I realized that not
only was it dated and too regionalized, having been published
in The Laramie Sunday Boomerang, December 19, 1982,
but that after all these years I finally wanted to follow the
advice of a teacher, and write it differently. I guess with my
increase in age and experience his wisdom finally had a chance
to sink in!
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At the time I was living in Laramie,
Wyoming, and decided to take a class on how to get published.
The teacher was Donald Murray, a Pulitzer-prize winning journalist.
I was not really certain why I was taking the class other than
the opportunity to be guided by someone who could write well
enough to win such a prestigious award. In retrospect I think
it was my writing blood yearning for an outlet.
My assignment for the class was
to choose two topics on which to write, write them up as a query
to a publisher, and submit the final for publication. Having
no idea what to write about, I decided to write about what I
did know, animals. Topic Number One was a story about my pet
rats (which ultimately resulted in a cooking column for the University
of WA student paper, a story for another time). For Topic Number
Two, I approached the local animal shelter and asked if I could
research an article about the shelter and the animals they tried
to save. They agreed, and I spent a week tracking the animal
residents, looking for the angle that would result in a good
story. And I got it, but like so many stories there is always
more under the surface to be unearthed. |
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But before the final choice of
story was made there were others that did not get told. The Laramie
Animal Shelter is a city shelter like so many others across the
United States, small and underfunded. Staffed by dedicated and
hardworking men and women who did their best to make the right
choices and care lovingly for the many animals that came their
wayan overwhelming tide of animals. At that time over 10
million animals were euthanized in shelters every year due to
a lack of enough homes. The Laramie Animal Shelter was no exception,
as of 1982 an average of 25 percent of its dogs and 12 percent
of its cats had to be euthanized.
Most of the 24 cages and 35 kennels
at the shelter are usually filled. The animals are well taken
care of, but they lack one thing a loving owner. Everywhere
you go the paws reach out for you, and the eyes of the animals
are filled with the hope that you might be the one they are looking
for.
As I cruised the aisles, face
after furry face stared back at me. The dogs would lunge joyfully
toward me in hopes that I was the answer to their canine prayers.
Number 4717, an eight-month old puppy, was no different. For
every visitor she put on a tail-wagging exhibition guaranteed
to soften the hardest heart.
My attention was caught by one
large black dog who did not greet me eagerly, he huddled in the
back of his cage, and his gaze spoke volumes to my heart, he
wanted to trust but was no longer sure that he could.
I took notes of the numbers on
each cage, and the occupant, and asked the shelter workers for
what background stories they had. Most of the dogs had been found
wandering, numbers increase dramatically during the summer. Tourists
frequently left Fido behind by the side of the highway, apparently
a dog was too much trouble to take care of while having fun on
vacation. One story that stood out for its special lack of humanity
was the dog surrendered because the owners had redecorated, and
he did not match the new décor.
The cats were less effusive in
their greetings, but nonetheless hopeful. My gaze was caught
by one way up top who peered down at me and meowed. The size
of his big apple head belied the information on the cage that
he was female, and when I questioned a shelter worker his sex
was double-checked, and it was discovered that she was a he.
My question bought him another week of life, and the possibility
that he might find a good, loving home.
I spent a great deal of time
interviewing the shelter workers, asking about their lives and
how they handled the difficult task they had chosen to do. Every
week there are animals that have to be euthanized to make room
for more, an unending cycle. One worker said, You get used
to it, but you never get to the point where you can accept it.
Another stated, Sometimes I almost cry if I have too put
an animal to sleep by myself. I look at it this way, I would
rather put an animal to sleep than have it be pregnant or be
a puppy out in the cold, be hit by a car, come down with disease,
or be neglected.
Much as I dreaded the thought,
I finally asked the workers if I could be present when the next
group of animals was euthanized. I felt as though I would be
letting the animals down if I was too much of an emotional coward
to witness the reality of what happens when lack of spaying,
neutering and proper education results in overpopulation. The
workers were concerned as to how I might respond, and were reluctant
at first to agree to my presence. Ultimately they made me promise
that I would not cry, a promise that I sincerely hoped that I
could keep.
When I arrived that day I was
understandably nervous, and as it turned out, I was about to
get my story.
The cats were first, a paw was
pulled out of the cage, and the injection was administered quickly.
Next were five dogs, and Number 4717 was among them. Four dogs
in turn were placed on the examination table, and given an injection
to the heart. Each dropped instantly. It was all so quick, and
so business-like, that I was able to hold strong emotionally
as I had promised, although I imagined that I would pay for my
current emotional distance later, in private.
And then it was Number 4717s
turn. And the injection missed the heart as sometimes happens.
She did not drop instantly, it would take more time for the injection
to take effect. So, they put her down on the floor so she could
wander around freely, and everyone continued on with their morning
chores.
The puppy was thrilled to be
out, and ran from person to person, tail wagging happily. Her
movements got slower and slower. Finally she went to the man
who was washing up the food bowls, and with a quiet sigh she
laid her head upon his foot, and died.
At that point I lost it, in order
to honor my promise I had to go cry in the bathroom. Even now
as I write this I am crying, even after all these years. I will
never forget that moment as long as I live, a moment that spoke
so eloquently of all the years of devotion and love that those
shelter animals had to offer, lifetimes that now would never
be.
When I emerged from the bathroom,
somewhat under control, the bodies of all the dogs and cats euthanized
had been laid out in neat rows in the garage in preparation for
transport to the city dump. There their bodies would be tossed
into an earthen pit, alongside any road-killed animals, and some
dirt would be bulldozed over them.
Lest you think this heartless,
the city did what they could with what budget they had. There
was not enough money to cremate the animals, this method of disposal
was quite common in rural areas. It was tough to stay, but I
hung in there, feeling as though my presence at least bore witness
to the lives of these animals, victims in a quiet war on overpopulation,
and gave them some honor in their passing. They did not go unmourned,
I cried for them, and for the countless others who had gone before,
and the untold numbers yet to come.
Here is the original beginning
to The Animals Are Waiting At the Shelter, and the
epitaph that I wrote for the puppy:
Number 4714 waited for
her owner for five days.
No one came.
She waited another five
days for someone to adopt her. Again, no one came. She was given
a shot of Sleepaway, and at the age of eight months the black
and white puppy went permanently to sleep with her head resting
on the feet of the only person who cared, an officer of the Laramie
Animal Shelter.
At the time that article was
submitted to my professor, Donald Murray, he thought it well
written but suggested that there could be more emotional appeal
in it. I disagreed, wanting to reach people with logic. In retrospect
I realize that deep down I was scared to expose myself emotionally,
I just was not brave enough.
Now, years later, I realize that
someone else besides the shelter workers did care; I did, and
I still do. I now have both the emotional chops and the courage
as a writer to dare to share how I felt. This new article was
written in hopes that my words will inspire others to care, and
to take action.
In checking up on Prof. Donald
Murray I discovered that he passed away in 2006 at the age of
82, immersed in an internet project to mentor aspiring writers.
Wherever you are now, Prof. Murray, I hope you are pleased that
I finally took your advice to heart, and put mine out there in
hopes of making a difference.
We have made progress in the
intervening years, now only 4 million animals are euthanized
each year, due in part to aggressive spaying and neutering programs,
but that is still 4 million too many. The bad guys are not the
shelters, but people who add animals to an already taxed population.
The choice you make when you adopt a pet could take a home away
from a shelter animal in need.
Here are some suggestions on
how you can help.
Dont buy from backyard
breeders. Check with purebred rescue organizations before buying
a puppy, there are many adults needing homes.
Encourage your neighbors to spay
and neuter; while they may dearly love Fluffy, want kittens like
her, and promise to find them good homes, the birth of those
kittens means less homes for animals on death row.
Pass this article along to as
many people you can think of, whether they have pets or not.
They may be in a position to help educate someone else.
Got feral cats in your neighborhood?
There are organizations that can help you get them spayed or
neutered. Check out the Animal Shelters and Rescue Groups in
the Resources section on my website for some suggestions.
Dare to care, and to show that
you carethe life you save could be someones future
pet.
Postscript: After he ran out
of time for the second time, I adopted the male cat mistakenly
identified as a female. He was a big, loving mush-bucket of a
tiger cat, and we named him OMalley. Goes to show you the
power of a single glance!
Rose De Dan Copywrite 2008 |