Wednesday, October 24, 2012

The Definition of Purpose


The Definition of Purpose

Note: If you are short on time and just want a good story, skip down to the paragraph that begins with "at 5:30 this morning."



Lately, my mind has been somewhat consumed with one thing: purpose.  I moved to Winston-Salem after graduating from college because as my best friend put it, “I didn’t have a plan, so I might as well move to Winston to be her roommate again.”  That plan satisfied me for a while, but then I began to search for something else.  What was my purpose as a new grad in Winston?  When would I find a job?  What was I supposed to be doing? 

Although I eventually secured work as a part time adjunct with Forsyth Technical Community College, it wasn’t long before I wasn’t satisfied with that, either.  I live with three Divinity students, and after having been graciously invited to several of their friends’ dinners and game nights, I caught the “grad school bug.”  I suddenly wanted nothing more than to be in graduate school, though I had no idea what I would study if I were to go to grad school.  When I was an undergrad, my life had purpose.  I was somebody.  I knew where I stood, I knew what I needed to work on, and I had a definite goal: graduation.  As I sat in my room in Winston, I simply felt demoted, purposeless, and like I was failing at post-grad life.  I wanted to be successful, and though I originally thought I wanted that success for myself, I think I was looking to please and impress others more than anything.  I was that girl at Gardner-Webb.  I was involved in all kinds of things, I loved my professors and as far as I know, they loved me.  I was invited to special conferences, led my peers, and was the first student to become a puppy raiser while in school.  I had purpose, I had admiration, and I was making the professors I held so dear proud.

Up until my senior year, I had always assumed I would go to graduate school straight out of college, or that if I didn’t, it would be because I had another clear career goal in mind.  Instead, I found myself lost in a sea of unemployed post-grads scrambling for part-time positions.  I cherished the moments that I was able to go back to Gardner-Webb and soak in the feelings of familiarity and belonging.  Now, don’t get me wrong. I was actually really enjoying Winston-Salem.  I had already fallen in love with the city and was beginning to form relationships with my new roommates and friends from church.  The day to day was actually going very well.  It was when I attempted to look down the road and try to visualize what I would be doing six months or a year from then that I began to feel anxious. 

My wonderful new roommates, who both took a few years off before coming to graduate school, gave me several great pep-talks and helped me to somewhat settle in the fact that God has purpose for my life even in the in-between stages.  I had just begun to take that to heart when the bomb dropped: Tucker was being career changed.

In the moment of that phone call, I felt so many emotions that I’m not sure I could ever fully express them all.  I was sad for him, frustrated with him, and disappointed in myself.  He had come so close only to be released from the program and into an uncertain future.  In the hours and days that followed the call, I realized that underneath all of the initial emotions, I was actually extremely upset that I wouldn’t be able to call my professors and administrators at Gardner-Webb to tell them that he had graduated.  I had wanted so badly to prove to them that I had been right about raising a puppy on a college campus.  I still knew in my heart that it had been a wonderful environment for a service dog to grow up in, but I had eagerly awaited the news that would show that beyond a shadow of a doubt.  In some ways, Tucker had been my last hold out for success.  I my mind, I hadn’t been terribly successful thus far, and I think I hoped that once Tucker was proven a success, I could ride the coattails of it and find a renewed feeling of purpose. 

I immediately decided that Tucker was going to be a service dog.  While I do sincerely believe that he has characteristics that would make him a wonderful service dog, I think I made this decision more out of an effort to save face than anything.  My mouth said, “he’s just so good and he needs a new job,” and my brain said, “by golly if he can’t put the Leader Dog title before his name, I’m going to make sure he can put a Therapy Dog title after it!”  At the time, even though I knew I had mixed motives and feelings about having him certified as a therapy dog, I still believed that, since therapy dogs are clearly a benefit to society, that this was the obvious path for him.

I contacted a trainer who graciously invited me to come watch his current therapy dog training class, and boy I’m glad I did.  Based off of the research I had done, I assumed that Tucker was probably 80 or 90 percent ready for the test.  I left the class that night realizing that he was probably more like 60 or 70 percent of the way there and that it would take much longer than I originally anticipated to bridge that gap.  I felt defeated and unsure, but in my mind, Tucker still had to have a job. 

That brings us to today (which is now in fact, yesterday).  In reality, there wasn’t really anything special about it.  I took Tucker to the vet for a general check up and my best friend and her fiancĂ© took Tucker with them to a park for a walk.  At the vet, several other clients commented on how well behaved Tucker was and how handsome he was, and while Tucker wasn’t necessarily the best of guests on the walk, I believe my roommate and her fiancĂ© still enjoyed having him there.  She showed me a video of him enjoying his first ride in the back of a truck (which was carefully monitored for safety I might add) and talked about how he desperately wanted to say hi to a big fluffy poodle.  After she went inside, I sat with him on the patio and thought about what it would mean for him to just be a dog.  He still brings people joy, both those close to him and those who simply admire him for a moment, and he really is just a good ole dog to have around.  However, by the time Tucker and I went to bed, I had completely forgotten about this inward conversation with myself.

At 5:30 this morning, someone screamed and woke me up.  I thought I was dreaming, and sat up to listen.  I heard it again, and again, and again.  Being the detective story and drama junkie that I am, I immediately assumed someone was being murdered outside my window in the parking lot.  Though the logical part of my brain said, “what the heck do you think you can do about it?” the human side of my brain replied with, “well I don’t know but get your butt up there!”  As I reached the top of the stairs, I realized that the screams were not from outside my house, but inside.  I looked down the hall and saw that one of my new roommate’s lights was on.  I burst into her room to find her crying hysterically, shaking, and curled up in the middle of her bed.  She managed to stutter the word “mouse” before beginning to cry again and pointed to the corner of her room.  As I began to search for said mouse, my other new roommate appeared and crawled onto the bed to console her. 

Though I looked and looked for the mouse, I couldn’t see evidence of one anywhere.  When we finally got her calmed down enough to hear us, I told her to move to the other girl’s room and that I was going to bring Tucker upstairs.  Tucker, who had heard the screams, was all too keen on getting upstairs to see what was happening.  It had been laundry day for this roommate, and each corner of the room had a pile of clothes on the floor.  Though I surveyed the room with a flashlight, I didn’t believe I would ever find the mouse and that it might even have escaped already.  It was at this moment that the other roommate appeared at the door to say that my frightened roommate had managed to get another word out.  Squirrel. 

While I had originally thought that there was a chance she had just dreamed about her arch enemy, the mouse, I knew that we had been having issues with squirrels in the past week, and realized that although I hadn’t seen it yet, there had to be one there.  I got Tucker excited and told him to “find that squirrel!”  Though I know he had no earthly idea what was going on, he understood enough to start poking his nose around the room while I carefully sifted through the piles and cleared the floor.  Sure enough, Tucker found the squirrel. 

For the next ten minutes, Tucker and I chased the squirrel around the room.  It was a team effort: the squirrel would jump into a box in the closet, I would begin slowly pulling items out, and Tucker would chase it out of the box and back into the room.  Eventually, Tucker helped me corner it behind my roommate’s printer, and I was able to catch it in a Tupperware container.  As it turns out, it was a little Sugar Glider who we believe got stuck in the wall when we had a hole repaired outside yesterday. 

I went to my other roommate’s bedroom to tell them we had indeed captured a small squirrel.  My still somewhat shaky roommate was incredibly excited and called out to Tucker that he was a good boy.  Before I could catch him, he then proceeded to leap onto this very high bed and smother her.  He was so happy she was happy, and she was so happy we had a squirrel-catching dog. 

As we finally began to laugh about the whole experience, the second roommate and I realized how differently we reacted to the situation.  When I came into the room and realized what was going on, I immediately began looking for the mouse.  She, on the other hand, immediately sat down on the bed and began to hold and comfort our terrified friend.  My now much calmer roommate thanked us for coming to her rescue and said she was glad Tucker and I were there to go after it. 

After poking holes in the Tupperware, Duck taping it shut, and putting it out on the screened in porch, Tucker and I returned to our room.  It was then that I realized that we do have purpose.  It may not be grand in the scheme of the world and it may not come with fancy titles or recognition, but we have purpose in the small little corner of the world God has placed us in and for the people he has chosen to put in our lives.  I may not be able to get Tucker certified as a therapy dog anytime soon, and I may find myself desperately searching for part-time work again come the spring, but in the end, He has a plan. 

Sometimes purpose isn’t fame, fortune, or long-term success.  Sometimes purpose is just catching a squirrel. 


  

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

The (Bad) News

Unfortunately, I got a call from Leader Dog yesterday to tell me that Tucker has been career changed.  Even though he made it to stage 4 of 4, he was too easily distracted by other dogs to serve as an a good guide.  While I am glad that this means he'll be headed back my way very soon, right now, the feelings are more that of sadness, disappointment, and stress.

I'm finding myself frustrated by those around me who cannot understand why I cried instead of jumping up and down.  I'm beginning to realize that as much as my friends were instrumental in raising him, very few have come close to understanding what it's like to actually be the raiser.  Even though I didn't want to give him up in May, I think every puppy raiser can understand that feeling of, "I put 11 months of my life into this - blood, sweat, and tears - and I want him to make it.  I want to see him in a harness, changing someone's life for the better."  It is hard to ask anyone but a puppy raiser to truly understand those conflicting emotions.

If Tucker had career changed that first month I gave him back, I'd have jumped for joy without question.  It is the fact that he made it this far - far enough that I didn't miss him all the time anymore - far enough that we all believed he would make it - far enough that I marked my calendar with, "Tucker should get his person this month!" that makes it hard.

It is hard because now that I know he can be mine again, I want him back, and I want him back NOW. Unfortunately, my living situation in Winston means that he will more than likely have to spend the next year three hours away from me at my parents' house.  Now, I am thankful that they have agreed to keep him and I know that he will be in good hands, but I am concerned about how that will change him.

I don't want the training that Tucker and I did to go to waste.  He's too good to just be a pet, and therefore, I want him to become a therapy dog.  The problem is that my sister's dog (who lives with my parents) is certifiably crazy roughly 60% of the time.  Don't get me wrong - she's a great dog, but she's not a Leader Dog - she wasn't raised to be.  I can't afford for her to undo all of Tucker's training and turn him into your average, somewhat unruly, house pet if he's going to be a therapy dog.

Now we come to the final piece of this puzzle: failure.  I knew going in that the odds were against him - 60-40 to be exact - but by the time he went back, and especially once he passed the first two phases of training, I thought we had beaten the odds.  For those of you who know me well, you know that failure is not something I embrace.  I have lived my life, and especially my last four years at GWU, wanting to be a success - doing everything in my power to make sure I was successful - and I usually was.  While career changing is not necessary synonymous with failure, right now it's hard to remember that.  I knew that dog distraction was a problem for him, so why couldn't I fix it?  Was it him?  Was it me?  Should I have sucked it up and made more time in my busy schedule last year to bombard him with unfamiliar dogs until it was no longer an issue?  Would that have even worked?

These are the thoughts currently plaguing my mind and the reason that I am not yet to the point where the happiness of his return can overwhelm the disappointment at his removal from the program.