Why We Rescue
So often I hear, "I don't know how you do it. I
couldn't give up a dog that I'd fostered."
Yes, it's hard -- harder with some than with others. But they need someone to
take that risk. Without someone
willing to give a piece of his heart, these dogs would, quite literally, die.
A while back, I ran across this story. It explains, better than I could, how
foster homes keep doing what
they do. If you've ever said, "I couldn't give up a dog that I'd fostered,"
please read this story and consider
risking your heart -- for the dogs.
--Connie
Little Pieces
Written by Grace Saalsaa for those who rescue and foster.
Melissa sat on the floor, unable to sit straight and tall like her mother had
always admonished her to do
when she was a child. Today, it would be impossible. And tomorrow....it probably
wouldn't be possible then
either. Her mind was too busy thinking about the dog that laid across her lap.
When he came to be with her, he had no name. She remembered that day very well.
The first sight of him
was enough to break her heart into little pieces. The woman who had taken this
dog from the rough streets
where he had lived, had tried to save him because she was unable to watch this
young dog find his own food in
a dumpster outside the crack house where he lived. Nobody cared that he was
gone.
His fur was very thick; so thick that she had to wiggle her fingers down to feel
his bony body. And as she
pulled her fingers away again, they were coated in old dirt. Black and white, he
was supposed to be. But on
that day he was beige and dust.
He sat in the back of her car panting continuously, ears laid outward for he had
lost his courage and couldn't
keep them proud and tall. He sat motionless, waiting and limp.
But the thing that was the most disturbing was the look in his eyes. They were
quiet eyes, sunken into his head -
and they watched her. They were alive with thought. He was waiting for her to do
something "to" him.
Little did he know at the time that, instead, she would "give" something to him.
She gave him one of the
little broken pieces of her heart.
She reached out to stroke his head and he instinctively squinched his eyes shut
and dropped his head, waiting
for the heavy hand. With that little bit of movement she gave him another one of
the broken pieces of her heart.
She took him home and gave him a bath. She toweled him dry and brushed some
order back into his coat. For that,
he was grateful and even though his own heart was loaded with worms, he accepted
yet another piece of her heart,
for it would help to heal his own.
"Would you like some water, big boy?" she whispered to him as she set down a
large bowl of cold well water. He
drank it up happily. He had been dehydrated for a long time and she knew it
would take him most of the week to
rehydrate.
He wanted more water - but it was gone. Ah...that's how it is, he thought to
himself. But he was grateful for
what he had been able to get. "Would you like some more?" and she gave him
another bowl along with another
little piece of her heart.
"I know that you are hungry. You don't have to find your own food anymore.
Here's a big bowl of good food for
you. I've added some warm water and a little piece of my heart."
Over the four months that he stayed with her, his health improved. The heart
full of worms was replaced piece by
piece with little bits of her loving heart. And each little piece worked a very
special kind of magic.
When the warmth of love and gentle caresses are added, the little broken pieces
knit together again and heal
the container it resides in. That container becomes whole again.
She watched each little broken piece fill a gap in the gentle dog until his
quiet eyes radiated the light from
the little pieces. You see, kind words gently spoken, turn the little pieces
into illumination for the spirit
that resides within.
He rested beside her, happy to be with her always. Never had he known such
kindness, such gentle caresses; such
love. His health had returned, his spirit was playful as a young dog's should be
and he had learned about love.
Now his heart was full. The healing was complete. It was time to go. There was
another person who had another
heart that was meant to be shared with him.
So she sat shapeless on the floor because all the broken pieces of her heart
were with the dog. It is difficult
to sit tall when your heart is not with you. She wrapped her arms around the dog
who sat with tall, proud ears
for her. Lean on me, he said.
And she gave him one last thing that would keep him strong; that would keep the
pieces of her heart together
long after he had gone on to live his new life. She gave him her tears and bound
them to the pieces with a simple
statement made from the ribbons of her heart.
"I love you, Joe."
And Joe lived happily ever after.
Melissa sat on the floor, straight and tall like her mother had always
admonished her to do when she was a
child. Today, it would be possible. And tomorrow....it probably would be
possible too. Because her mind was
busy thinking about this, the next dog that laid across her lap.
Where did she get the heart to help yet another dog, you ask?
Ahhh....it came with the dog. They always bring a little bit of heart with them.
And when the rescuer breathes in
that little bit of heart, it quickly grows and fills the void left by the last
dog.