Here comes that feeling again. It comes and goes. Not as
frequently as it did in the past, but it’s recognizable nonetheless. It’s that
feeling I got when my son stood on the podium at a wrestling tournament. Or the
feeling I had when I watched my other son performing on stage at Big Ticket, a
Christian music festival in Gaylord. I call it Mom Pride. Now that my boys are
grown the mom pride is still there, but it comes and goes less frequently as
they move into their adult lives. It’s not a touchdown announcement over the
loudspeaker in a football stadium; it’s more like someone telling me my son has
had an impact on her child’s life. But I’m not even talking about that. The mom
pride feeling I’m talking about recently came about because of my dog, Betsy. Betsy
is an 18 month old Border Collie/Australian Shepherd mix. To say she has been a
challenge would be an extreme understatement. After the first week of sweet,
cute puppy, emerged the Tasmanian Devil. She has an exuberant amount on energy
that never, ever slows down. This winter I have spent more time outdoors than
ever before in my 49 years of life. Betsy plays and plays and plays and plays.
So it probably won’t surprise you to know that we have been reluctant to let
her stay home, unkenneled during the day. The image of those YouTube videos of
guity dogs standing in front of a destroyed couch with the owners saying “Did
you do that?” haunted me. But the guilt of having this full-of-energy dog
spending her days cooped up in a 4x5 kennel eclipsed the worry of returning
home to a “stuffingectomy” of my couch cushions. We started by having her spend
nights outside of the kennel. After about a week of no destruction we decided
to let her try a few hours on her own, kennel-free. When I arrived home I
searched the house, looking for some evidence of destruction, only to simply
find a warm spot on the couch where she had spent her time patiently watching
for our return. So the next day we jumped. 8 hours. No kennel. I drove home
with trepidation, wondering what I would find. A dead cat? Shredded couch
cushions? A chewed up coffee table? When I walked in to a wiggly, wagging, mass
of black and white fur, there was no destruction to be had, not anywhere.
Success! What followed was that old feeling of Mom Pride that rivaled straight
A report cards and Christmas Eve service solos. “I am so proud of Betsy right
now,” I gushed to Tom. I was proud of my dog? You bet. With hard work comes success
and with success comes pride. Mom Pride.
The Flip Side is a monthly column that I write for a local paper. I love writing about my life and have found that people of all ages can relate to what I write about at one time or another. The first several columns were added in no particular order. I add new ones as I write them. I usually wait until the column has been published in the paper before adding it here, but not always. I also add unpublished columns as I write them. Enjoy!!
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