Louisville Medicine Volume 66, Issue 7 | Page 33

DOCTORS' Lounge SPEAK YOUR MIND If you would like to respond to an article in this issue, please submit an article or letter to the editor. Contributions may be sent to [email protected] or may be submitted online at www.glms.org. The GLMS Editorial Board reserves the right to choose what will be published. Please note that the views expressed in Doctors’ Lounge or any other article in this publication are not those of the Greater Louisville Medical Society or Louisville Medicine. WE JUMPED at the Chance Mary G. Barry, MD Louisville Medicine Editor [email protected] T o meet Chance, our new Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retriever. Our oldest cat, Kleine, died at nearly 18-years-old back in the spring, and we buried her out in the back yard and planted a canna lily to mark the spot. Some years, our cannas come back and sprout all over the garden bed; Kleine’s has room to grow, for sure. My husband, Goetz, grew up with dogs, most famously Bobbi, the humping dachs- hund. Despite having been properly fixed, he greeted all with carnal enthusiasm. Bred to nose out and kill ferrets, he was an avid hunter of all varmints and he escaped, over and over, chasing them into yards and ponds and brooks and farmers’ fields. He once killed a prize sheep, causing a village up- roar. “Basta!” was the word Bobbi heard the most, meaning “Stop that NOW and get over here.” Goetz and I really wanted the joy of a dog but were not enthused at getting one we must repeatedly find. My experience was limited to dog-sit- ting, which I did in my youth. There was a yellow lab named Maggie who would cov- er her eyes with her paws if she had done something bad; Mickey the border collie who herded me and every other dog on the street; and the black lab Holly who had a pi- rate streak and stole one’s shoes. (Her owner explained to me that all shoes go on the top shelf of the closet, no exceptions.) Last year, my best buddy, Col. Marilyn Rhodes, would go on the road and leave with us her Dee Dee, an old, slow and very dear yellow lab. Dee Dee was placid and an ideal dog for our other two cats, who shrank from her in fear, even though she struggled sometimes just to stand. Tor is scared of all strangers, and our deaf FLK never met a stranger, but neither cat is partial to dogs, those big galumphing messy tail-wagging intruders. But we needed a dog. We toured shelters and found dogs who needed us but might terrorize the cats. Finally, on the advice of our friend Beth Small, we signed up with GRRAND, the Golden Retriever Rescue and Adoption of Needy Dogs organization. Except for two part-time kennel workers, this is an all-volunteer group of the most dedicated, kind, devoted-to-the-mission people we have ever met. The group accepts retrievers and mixed breeds who need a new home, cares for them, meets their medical needs, trains and fosters them, and matches them for adoption by people like us, who have a longing for a certain sort of dog. For us it was: not a puppy, not a mini-dog, not a wildly athletic dog, not a cat-terrorist. The group is highly organized, efficient and extremely thorough in vetting prospective owners. They check multiple references and make a home visit to establish that a safe and happy place awaits the adoptee. GRRAND has placed nearly 5,000 dogs since it grew out of the Greater Louisville Golden Retriever Club and incorporated as a non-profit in 1996. And ‘Grand’ is the word for our new dog, Chance. He is nine, and his real mother found him as a tyke on the street in Ashland, Ky. She was sedentary, and they ate the same food, so he is “traditionally built” like Ms. Precious Ramotswe. His real mother had sudden severe heart problems, so in early October he came to us. He’s on a diet, he loves to ride in the car, he loves to try to chase deer (no can do) and he is puzzled why the cats won’t yet nuzzle or cuddle him. He does not beg or sulk or chew. We could rub his ears all day. He is a laugh a minute and we feel so utterly lucky, and grateful beyond words to GRRAND. Need a lift? Dog ownership is said to improve longevity and happiness both. The American Heart Association issued an of- ficial statement in 2013, citing the various limitations of multiple studies, and con- cluding that “Dog ownership is probably DECEMBER 2018 31