Early this morning as I ran west toward the foothills
without a single car in sight, I came across a man and his dog. I was running
facing traffic in the bike lane, bordered on the right by a newly-painted white
line. The man, his dog and I were going in the same direction. As I approached
from behind, the dog stepped over the white line and into the traffic lane. The
man stopped.
Instead of yanking on his dog’s leash, this man quietly told
his dog to sit, which he did, looking a little dolefully at his owner. Instead
of yelling at his dog, which part of me expected this man to do, he got down on
his knees and stroked his dog’s head. Then he looked into his eyes and said
simply, “Don’t go in the road.”
Now. I’m not sure if this dog, or any dog, gets it when it
comes to white lines on the road. But after watching this man and this dog, I
suspect that there are dogs, if properly taught, who can learn to beware of the
white line on the road and respect it as a boundary. They won’t ever know why
but will comply because they wish to please their master. Maybe they’ll even
come to trust that the boundary is for their own good. That it is there to
somehow keep them safe.
White lines, in one form or another, are everywhere. They keep
us on the straight and narrow. Insist that we do what’s right, for our own
good, to keep us safe, to make sure we take our turn, to keep us “in line.”
Sometimes we human beings balk. There are lines we disagree
with. Sometimes we’re in a hurry or we just don’t give a hoot and we step over. But most of us, most of the time, take note
of the white line and stay inside it. We
know it’s there for a reason.
It’s a rocky road out there. As I continued on my run, I got to thinking
that we’d all be better off if we did a little less yelling and yanking.
Instead we might offer a gentle touch and speak a little more softly—to our
dogs and to each other.
There’s no avoiding the road. Head on out but take note of
the white line and hug your dog.
1 comment:
That's a touching story, Libby -- and I love that the man gently instructed the dog rather than yanking on a leash and yelling. That's also how I get the best response from my dog when I'm trying to get her to behave on a walk.
If only that would work with stubborn and rebellious humans! :D
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