The Dogs
In My Life
Where
to begin? Like Nabokov, I’d like to
command, “Speak Memory, speak. Good Memory!” But
the very first dog in my life figures mainly as
a pre-memory: she was a bulldog named Princess
who, my mother says, terrified me. I was three
at the time; my father was in Korea. The proud
owners of Princess were in the habit, according
to my mother, of pushing her around the block in
a baby carriage. Princess loved these strolls so
much that whenever she was out on her own, and
happened to see a baby carriage, she’d try
to jump in. This behavior did not endear Princess
to the mothers and babies of the neighborhood.
But let’s return to my terror. My mother
had a theory about it: seeing a dog, an ugly dog,
where a baby ought to be just blew to flinders
my tiny preconceptions of the way the world worked.
The bulldog in the baby carriage triggered a pre-LSD
experience, if you get what I’m saying, thrusting
me into an Alice-in-Wonderland/Franz Kafka reality.
I had as much of a psychotic reaction, in short,
as a moppet can muster, causing me to run away
from the baby carriage, hysterical, screaming and
inconsolable. It must have been a Major Problem
Area in the child-psych department, judging by
the number of times my mother has told this goddam
story, usually to complete strangers.
But I don’t remember any of this. I have
only one memory of Princess, a memory which played
a large role in the formation of my mature (so
to speak) sexuality. But we’ll get to that.
For now, let’s leave Princess and say only
that she seemed to embody most of the qualities
50’s America looked for in a dog; that is,
she was lovable yet mildly annoying, ugly in a
cute sort of way, and famous in the neighborhood.
When my father returned
from Korea, he brought with him a deck of cards
featuring 52 different
naked women, a tube which revealed a naked woman
when held up to a light, and the only “war” story
I ever heard him tell, about a Korean family, discovered
by a squeamish squad of G.I.s, eating a dog. (These
horrified rumors, by the way, that third-world
folks eat dogs at the drop of a hat are among the
more bizarre manifestations of racism. I’ve
heard these tales about Vietnamese refugees—”It’s
true! They trap ‘em right there in Golden
Gate Park!” Even if these stories were true,
gosh, maybe these people were hungry. Hey, if I
was living in a bomb crater, thousands of miles
from a Kentucky Fried, I’d eat Rover too.)
When pressed, my father
admitted he hadn’t
seen the dog-devouring himself. As a matter of
fact, when I finally worked up the nerve in the
mid-60s to call my father a condescending neoimperialist
for telling this story, it was the first of many
occasions that he kicked me out of the house. On
such occasions, I’d usually spend the night
on my girlfriend’s couch with Blackie, her
sullen Labrador. Many times I’d wake up in
the middle of the night to find Blackie’s
face inches from mine motionlessly staring at me.
He’d be making this noise, halfway between
a growl and a whimper. I didn’t know if he
wanted to lick my face or tear out my throat. Come
to think of it, I had similar doubts about my girlfriend,
who later threw me over for a Mormon with a drinking
problem. But that’s another story for another
time.
The cruel truth is I
never had a dog as a child. My father had grown
up on a farm, and the idea
of keeping an animal as a pet struck him as foolish
and decadent. “What do you want a dog for?” he’d
say to me, “You aren’t blind and we
don’t raise sheep.”
Faced with this attitude
I could only content myself with the glorious
dogs of fiction: Jim Kjelgaard’s
Big Red, the seeing eye dog from Follow My Leader
(the first work of pop culture in my experience
to feature the exchange, “Go ahead, Doc,
take the bandages off.” “They are off,
Tommy.”) Old Yeller, The Shaggy Dog and D.A.,
Dogs of Flanders and Disney—true blue dogs
who fetched ducks, pulled icy sleds over tundra,
and lugged grenades and radios through the steaming
jungles of the Pacific Theatre of Operations. All
I wanted, when I grew up was a manly squint and
a deep voice with which to command my wonder dog: “Lassie,
fetch Timmy,” or “Bring me the lug
wrench, Rinty,” or “Bullet, take the
jeep and get the doc. I think my leg’s broke,” or “King,
this case is closed!”
My childhood swanned
with little Scotties whining by their master’s graves, brave little Benjies,
tireless mutts trotting the long miles home, fierce
beasts closing mighty jaws around the wrists of
bad guys, forcing them to drop their revolvers: “Good
dog, Ladd. Now bring it to me!”
Reader’s Digest! Boy’s Life! Saturday
Evening Post! From these pages dogs bounded in
great leaps, to yelp for help as perfect homes
filled with smoke. They lugged babies through howling
storms and still found time to fetch, roll over,
wrestle, sleep beside you at the Old Fishin’ Hole,
and even pose patiently for comic photographs in
Life: wearing sunbonnets or big silly sunglasses,
sporting false teeth, sitting in baby carriages—Even
today, the Heartwarming Dog shows up on slow-news-day
soundbites: sunny dogs, Frisbee-snatching dogs,
drug-sniffing dogs, dogs that guide the deaf, lifeguard
dogs. We even have Good Dog Carl and William Wegman’s
Man Ray photographs for the ironic dog lover.
And there’s the flip side of the dog-as-tool:
the security dog, the snarling Doberman, the sly
German shepherd, the rabid St. Bernard. This is
the tool gone out of control, the pit bull’s
lock of a jaw at a bitter master’s command.
In the deep woods somewhere, the ecstatic wailing
of hounds must still be heard, as they corner some
wild creature. Men with loaded weapons still amble
to the kill, making mean jokes as they pass the
bottle back and forth.
These are the dogs of
our hopes and fears. Dogs in the real world don’t always survive their
adventures. For example, there was Swinburne, a
Great Dane, who roamed my hometown at will, leaping
happily on small children, knocking them over,
sending them home in tears. One day Swinburne’s
body, riddled with shotgun pellets, was discovered
at the city dump. Who knows what Swinburne’s
crime against his assassin had been? Every small
town has a subculture of gun lovers with a grudge
against the pesky. His killer was never found,
but his murder was a front page story in the local
papers proving Swineburne’s legendary status
in my hometown. Contrast this to New York City,
where the dogs are leashed and pooper-scoopered,
and the only bodies found in dumps are the remains
of underbosses. And of course, I am familiar with
the stories of Manhattan poodles driven insane
by the constraints of condo-dwelling, who leap
willfully to their deaths from the tiny patios
of high-rises. I admit it. I believe these stories.
A dog is not an urban creature. A dog belongs
on a porch, or sleeping in the middle of the dirt
road of some sun-baked township. A dog belongs
in the back of a pickup, or following two steps
behind its hippie owner. A dog should carry a tennis
ball or a stick in its mouth. If possible, it should
have a red bandana wrapped around its neck.
For 27 days in the early ‘70s I lived on
a communal farm. The five dogs that lived there
had formed a pack, eating and/or frightening our
neighbor’s chickens. This behavior did not
endear the dogs to our farming neighbors. My fellow
communards, naturally, believed that dogs should
run wild, run free. I went along with this, until
a car drove by one day and somebody inside pointed
a rifle at us then drove on. I promptly got in
my VW and drove on too. They weren’t my dogs,
and I was damned if I was going to get shot for
them—an attitude, by the way, which was a
pretty close analog of my feelings towards the
Vietnam War.
Just two weeks before,
on a stoned hippie whim, we’d packed all the dogs and two cats into
my VW, because somebody had heard it was Free Distemper
Shots Night at some progressive Veterinary Clinic
in the State Capitol. So I drove the two hours
to Capital City with the dogs, the cats, a folksinger,
his twelve-string, and a lesbian heroin addict
who was into macrobiotics. (Ah, those were the
days!) When we arrived, the clinic was closed.
The folksinger and lesbian decided to stay, and
I had to drive back to the farm alone—well,
not alone, with a whining, spitting mass of fur
and muscle. It reminded me of a similar trip I’d
made back in 1968, in the same VW, with a retarded
woman, a registered nurse and two Norwegian elkhounds
dying from a rare kidney disease. But that’s
a tale for which the world is not yet prepared.
The point is, up to a
point, I was a sap for a dog. A dog was a tool
for me no less than a hound
for a hunter. The function of the dog, at that
point in time, was to be an object of amusement
while I was under the influence of illicit drugs.
Dogs, you might say, occupied roughly the same
place in my life that cable television does today.
Of course I would never drive two hours to take
my cable-ready television to a free clinic in the
state capital. Especially not in a ‘65 VW.
One does not have the same sentimental attachment.
But that point is moot.
I don’t have a cable-ready
television, any more than I had a dog as a child.
Now I realize how pathetic that sounds. When you
talk about dogs, frankly, the pathetic is hard
to avoid. But if you’re starting to picture
me as some little Ian-dog, wide-eyed, looking up
at your feast hoping for a scrap, a pat on the
head, attention in short, well, it might not be
the hippest of mental images, but I’ll go
with it. I’ll go all the way with it.
When I was in 7th grade,
on the bathetic brink of puberty, my mother in
her frugal wisdom bought
me a pair of pants from a mail-order catalog. I
was not popular, even though I possessed a certain
inchoate intelligence, a gift for lip and a genuine
flair for self-destructive behavior—you know,
throwing dirt lumps at the shiny souped-up cars
of sociopathic juveniles, starting small fires
on the edge of town, that sort of thing. Well,
to make a long story short, on my way from Homeroom
to History one morning, my mail-order pants split
at the seams. They just fell apart. They looked,
in their spontaneous disintegration, like a pair
of chaps from a cowboy movie, only there were no
weather-beaten chinos beneath them just the pale
flesh of my troubled legs. Mortified, I fled the
school and ran home through the back alleys, weeping,
cursing under my breath, hating my parents, God,
the school system, President Kennedy’s physical
fitness program, my hometown, my state, shoddy
workmanship in boy’s clothing, the mail-order
business in particular, capitalism in general,
and—myself.
Yes, I, I, I bore the
brunt of my rage and humiliation. My self-loathing
was bottomless as I raced home,
pants flapping like the tattered sails of a schooner
racked by the winds of a ruthless sea. Would I
had never been born! was my thoughts’ gist,
as tears squirted from my eyes, to fall behind
me with a noise like bursting water balloons. My
reasoning was this: if I’d never been born,
I wouldn’t get into fistfights every morning
before Homeroom, my father’s blood pressure
would go down, my sister would no longer suffer
Dutch-rub agonies at my hands, my mother could
use my bedroom for a sewing room, communists would
discard their nuclear weapons, lions and lambs
would lie down together, and the Pants From Hell
would never have been ordered in the first place!
It was in the turbulent
center of this matrix of misery that I rounded
the corner of my block
to see an ambulance parked in front of the Dorfmanns’,
two doors up from us. As I ran past hoping to be
such a blur of motion that, like the Flash, I would
achieve invisibility, I noticed two men in white
carrying Mr. Dorfmann down the front steps, his
wife framed in the doorway above him, her mouth
a quivering zero of concern. I learned later that
he’d had a heart attack (he recovered), but
such was the egotism of my self-pity that I believed
my very presence in the vicinity, my alarming state
of mind, had acted in some hideous psychokinetic
manner hitherto unknown to science, and killed
poor Mr. Dorfmann.
When I got home, all
the doors were locked (cautious Mother was out
shopping), so I went under the backyard
lilac bush, hunkered down, and gave out great snorkeling
sobs that put every bird within a five block radius
to flight. They wheeled like vultures in the sky
above me. My plan was to sit there sniffling, until
all my ducts dried up. I’d dehydrate, turn
to dust, and blow away. This was a good plan.
But then Skipper came along.
Skipper was our next-door
neighbors’ dog,
a black cocker spaniel who, at that point in time,
was wearing a plaster cast that covered his lower
torso, and held his right hind leg immobile at
a slight angle away from his body. Skipper’s
hip had been broken a month before, by (the neighborhood
assumed) an angry tennis player from the public
court down the street. Skipper loved to chase balls,
whether people were playing fetch with him or not.
He had the habit of bounding enthusiastically into
the middle of matches and making spectacular leaps
six or seven feet into the air to catch balls in
mid-play. This behavior did not endear Skipper
to lovers of tennis.
Immediately after his
owners had brought Skipper home from the vet
in his glowing white cast, Skipper
disappeared for a week. We thought he’d met
the same fate as Swineburne, but he showed up finally,
cast filthy, coat matted, tail wagging, with a
dirty gray tennis ball in his mouth, which he dropped
at his master’s feet. Then he barked twice,
in what I can only assume were triumph and joy.
So Skipper came along,
limping energetically, tail lolling, a tennis
ball held hopefully in his
mouth. I wrapped my arms around his neck and wailed, “I’m
hugging my neighbor’s dog, America! I have
to hug someone else’s dog!” Then Skipper
dropped the ball at my feet and barked twice.
So I threw the damn ball
for Skipper until my mother came home, and another
emotional crisis
passed, thanks to Man’s Best Friend. Which
brings me back to Princess.
One day, I was playing
in front of our house. I couldn’t have
been much older than four. It was autumn. The
leaves were changing colors
and falling. The noon whistle had just blown. Four
teenage girls were sitting in front of our house,
out of sight of the nearby high school, in a gray
boxy parked car, casually inhaling cigarettes before
they had to go back to class. Because I was the
child of parents who only got in a car to go somewhere,
I was baffled by their just sitting there. So l
walked up to the car, intending to ask them what
the deal was.
At that moment Princess came waddling along, with
what was probably a grin but at the time seemed
like a foaming snarl on her mashed-in face. I lost
my head. I started running for the gray car and
girls like a swimmer trying to make the island
before the sharks got him. As I started to scream,
so did the girls, and the back door opened, and
they hauled me in.
Screams turned to giggles
as the back door slammed. I found myself sitting
between two girls with plucked
eyebrows and grown-up eyes. As I peered around
the girl on my right, I could see the top of Princess’ ugly
head as she stood on her hind legs lo look in the
window. She was whining with desire, probably thinking
this was the biggest baby carriage she’d
ever seen. The girl on my right stopped giggling,
rolled down the window, and started to scratch
Princess behind her ears. “She won’t
hurtcha,” the girl said to me. “It’s
just old Princess. See? Everybody knows old Princess.”
“I’m Ian,” I volunteered. The
front seat girls ignored me and returned to their
furious smoking and whispered gossip. “I
live right up there,” I said proudly. I was
trying to impress them, break the ice.
I looked at the girl
on my left. She gave me a weary smile and frenched
her Pall Mall, pulling
up twin columns of smoke from her parted lips into
her flared nostrils. I can’t begin to tell
you how glamorized I was by this. Then she blew
the smoke out the windows and we all fell into
a silence broken only by the damp panting of Princess.
“Where you going?” I
asked.
The girl behind the wheel
didn’t even bother
to turn around. “Crazy,” she said,
bored. “Want to come along?”
I began to nod my head
furiously. “Yes,” I
said. “Yes, yes, yes!” I was bouncing
up and down on the seat in what feminists would
years later term a pre-orgasmic state.
But they didn’t
take me anywhere. My mother came and retrieved
me. I can still see them recede
behind me, four delinquent girls and an ugly dog,
as my mother carried me into the house and a constantly
alarming future. This is my earliest memory
And so the puppies of
innocence grow to be the wild dogs snarling in
the back of the adult psyche.
But I still remember the vicious beasts as they
once were, sweet little guys abandoned on the front
steps of my childhood id—the little fluffy
one called Desire for Escape, the wiry nervous
one called A Mother’s Love, the yellow-eyed
wolfling called The Brief Attention of Restless
Teenage Girls.
No, there is no lack
of hellhounds to dog a poor boy’s heels, but it’s always the runt
of the litter, the little tail-wagger so ugly it’s
cute, wanting no more than love, that’s the
scary nameless one. It’s always the harmless
that prey on my mind. Maybe there’s just
no place for puppy love in a dog-eat-dog world.
I dunno. I gotta go.
“The Dogs in My Life” by
Ian Shoales from Mondo Canine (copyright 1991
by Jon Winokur)
reprinted by permission of the author. |