Denver Home Living Huettner Capital Summer 2017 | Page 29
VPFL has settled on the English Golden
Retriever as its breed of choice because it has
a strong drive to please its owner, is a quick
learner, is extremely gentle, and has an innate
ability to “read” its master. The dog actually
walks a delicate line: on the one hand, it is
trained to obey, but on the other, it is trained
to “act out” by barking to alert the veteran
to a potentially dangerous situation where he
may become hyperstimulated. “The dog will be
psychologically torn between the master saying
‘lay down,’ for example, and his knowledge that
there is a dangerous situation brewing,” notes
Griggs. These service dogs also assist many veterans
with night terrors, often by laying their entire body
on the veteran’s chest, providing deep pressure
therapy, or by directly licking the veteran’s face.
Unlike other service dog organizations, VPFL
takes a novel tactic in allowing strangers to interact
with the service dogs. Not only are people allowed
to touch the service dog, but they are actually
encouraged to do so. “Everyone loves a puppy,” says
Griggs, and veterans are encouraged to break down
their communication barriers and answer questions
about their dog. “When people approach them in a
non-threatening way,” he says, “it’s the perfect way to
combat many veterans’ sense of isolation and loneliness.”
BO & GRIGGS
for their behavior and command responses. The
total costs to complete the two-year training program,
along with veterinary and other basic expenses, is only
about $3,500—a far cry from the original estimate
for a fully trained service dog. All of the costs are
fully covered by VPFL on the veteran’s behalf.
Griggs explains the many other benefits his approach
offers: “Even if we had the budget to afford a fully trained
dog, there is a one-to-three year waiting list to adopt. Our
veterans are struggling and cannot wait that long.” As a
PTSD sufferer himself, Griggs can describe in vivid detail the
isolation and fear these veterans face, particularly in social or
crowded situations. “The dog gives them the ability to start
moving out of that hypervigilant state that is so limiting,”
he says. “When they get a puppy at eight weeks, they have
to focus on the puppy rather than focus on themselves. They
really form a strong bond with the puppy at that young age.”
Although the first couple of weeks can be difficult, Griggs
is there at every step to help the process stay on track.
Griggs funded the adoption, training, and health needs
of the program’s first dog himself. This dog eventually
became his own service dog, Bo, who remains by his side
pretty much 24/7. Bo—or Maximus Amicus Bodidlius to
cite his full AKC-registered name—was specially trained
to help Griggs handle extreme feelings of anger resulting
from his wartime experiences. Thanks in part to Bo, he
doesn’t suffer those feelings of anger too often anymore.
Griggs is pretty frugal when it comes to his agency’s
budget, viewing himself as a careful steward of people’s
donations. He doesn’t draw a salary despite spending
about sixty-to-eighty hours per week on the job, but he
loves what he does. Always trying to increase the number
of trained service dogs he has available to match with the
high demand, Griggs said his goal is to find volunteers
who will foster adult English Golden Retrievers for
breeding purposes. To help reach that goal, he welcomes
donations of any size at www.vetpuppyforlife.org.
Griggs recently worked intensively with one veteran
and his dog to be able to complete a shopping trip at
Walmart. Just recently, the vet told Griggs he had made
it through the store without incident. “The veterans
are trained to handle the dog and carriage in a certain
protective mode while moving through the store,”
he says. But to make that trip on a crowded Sunday
morning? Says Griggs, “I was flabbergasted.”
www.vetpuppyforlife.org
[email protected]
Griggs calls the difference between pre- and post-puppy
“night and day” for many veterans. “We saw one of our
puppies graduate today and the veteran who came in to
take his test is a different guy from the one who came in at
the beginning,” he says. “The difference is unbelievable.”
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