I can’t resist reblogging this blog from 9 years ago, even though two of its main characters, Frida and Diego, have crossed to that doggie domain in the sky. When I saw the prompt word “latch,” I was curious about whether I had ever used the word in a post, so I searched for it and this story was one of 9 that popped up. I had long forgotten this entry from so long ago and so enjoyed reading it as though someone else had written it. I hope you enjoy it, too. R.I.P. dear Frida, dear Diego. oxoxox
My Life As A Dog
The time in the upper right corner of my computer screen blinks over to 8:30 a.m. and the dogs are still quiet. But for some reason, whenever I think or type that thought first thing in the morning, Frida immediately whines at my door and then the other two stir in their cages. It happens as soon as I finish typing the sentence, reaffirming my belief that we are tied psychically. She has moved to just outside my door now, her heart broken by the fact that I have not immediately answered her demand to be let into my presence.
I roll out of bed, bemoaning the crick in my back that reminds me I have recently traveled—lugging the heavy cases down from the stoop outside my compound gate myself, knowing that if I let the taxi driver in that he will be rushed by the dogs who are half anxious to see me but even more anxious to escape the confines of their comfortable home to roam the wild mountain above in search of the scent messages left by generations of other dogs.
Now I open the door that leads from the hallway to my room and Frida rushes in to be let out to the lower garden from the sliding glass door in my bedroom. I try to return to my bed, but Morrie moans his distinctive complaint that zooms from high register to low in a message that conveys impatience, heartbreak and demands all in his own particular language.
Diego simply claws at the latch to his cage. I go out to the doggie domain––recently completed after two months of cement dust, sledgehammers, and concrete sponges chewed and distributed in tiny pieces over the entire yard and terrace by the dogs. Peace once again reigns except for the demands of the pups, spread evenly over the day from mealtime to mealtime.
“Let me out to pee,” they say. Then “Feed me.” Later it will be, “Throw my toy one hundred times in a row for me to fetch,” or “Might you forget and give us another dog biscuit even though you gave us one two minutes ago?” or, more loudly—in fact as loudly as three dog voices could possibly declare themselves—”Get those wayfarers out of our street!!! Wayfarers, be off! Get away now. Take your dogs with you!!!”
I carry on, knowing I can get away with a few more moments of blogging before it will be necessary to give them their morning kibble. Diego and Morrie tussle outside my open (but screened) sliding glass doors. Growling, leaping, rolling over in doggie sideways-double-somersaults, they could go on like this for hours. It irritates Frida, old girl like me, who, although she wants to be no part of it, still resents the extra attention given to the new dog, Morrie, by her former partner Diego.
For years Frida has been bothered by the attentions of the younger and more playful and active Diego, but now that he has a companion with equal if not more energy, she resents it and is permanently crabby towards the newest addition to our family. After seven months, this has not changed. When I arrive home and the garage door opens, there is the loud cacophony of Morrie barking to be noticed, Frida barking to tell him to get away from “her” best friend, Diego’s barking at Frida to tell her to let the smaller dog alone. It is deafening, and I add my louder shouts for them all to be quiet.
Once, when a friend follows me home in his car, he announces that my cries are more disturbing to him and probably the entire neighborhood than the barks and growls of the dogs could ever be, and I realize that in this house of canines, I have probably reverted to my animal nature. I growl. I bark. Do I tear at my food and secretly lust for bones to gnaw upon? Probably not. My behavior as influenced by my housemates is actually more metaphoric than actual.
I pull myself away from my compulsion. As necessary as sealing Morrie’s throw-toy away in the metal chest where I also lock away their extra dog food is my closing of the lid of my laptop. It is time to be away to other things. Feeding the dogs. Running errands in town. I could throw sentence after sentence off into cyber space for as many hours as Morrie could fetch his toy, but there is more to life—a life that needs to be lived both for itself and the dogs’ hunger as for the necessity of having something to write about tomorrow, or this afternoon or evening—whenever I can find the time to throw my mind out to see what I will retrieve from my life to bring to you eagerly, seeing what you will throw back to me.
(My apologies to the excellent movie by the same name as this post. If you haven’t seen it, you should. It is in my list of ten favorite movies of all time.)
for RDP the prompt is “Latch.”

Nice pic 💯
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I have a lot of trouble writing about the dogs that have passed on. I don’t have that problem with people — just pets. There must be a reason for that, but I don’t know what it is. Lovely tale (tail?) — and it sounds just like home. I miss all the others. It’s not like you ever stop missing them but you just stop missing them quite so poignantly.
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No.. I agree. It can be very painful, but also it is a way to remember them…like visiting a human relative’s grave.
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My mother is buried in Florida and I don’t know exactly where. My brother was cremated — and we have little doggy memorial stones all over the garden. With pictures.
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I have graves for a number of my animals..cats, dogs, birds. How is it that you don’t know where you mother is buried? Is it rude of me to ask?If so…sorry.
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My father was not forthcoming. I know where the original burial place was — in New York where they had lived until Florida wooed them. But I was in Israel when she died. I had been there to see here not very long before and we talked on the phone frequently until literally hours before she died. Dad was in Florida and he didn’t tell me. I’m not sure he remembered by the time I came back to the States. He’d found another woman by then and was busy playing bridge. He really didn’t like having me around because I remembered and he knew I remembered. I was also the only one who talked back to him — something he liked even less.
What’s funny — if there’s anything funny about this — is that there’s lots of medication today that might have turned him into a more or less normal guy — assuming you could have gotten him to a doctor for diagnosis. He didn’t like psych doctors either. In fact, he was terrified of shrinks. There was so much he was hiding.
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Unbelievable that he didn’t tell you where your mother was buried, however. Actually, I don’t know exactly where my parents are buried, either. My mother insisted that she’d come back and haunt us if we buried her in Murdo, where I grew up. She and my dad moved to Tucson the minute I graduated from high School and she spent twenty more years there before moving to Wyoming to be near my sister. My dad was buried in an above ground vault in Tucson, as was she. I’ve visited it just one time as both of their funerals were in Murdo, where folks knew them. I really should try to locate their burial spot again. We had tombstones made for them in our family plot in Murdo, SD, which is where my ashes will be buried, along with some of Bob’s. spent her last
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I found your parents’ grave site on FindaGrave.com, which I heartily recommend for such searches. (Local volunteers visit cemeteries and document the graves they find.) Here is your mom’s info, which links to your dad’s info. There’s a photo of their headstone. https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/114453132/eunice-p-dykstra
(Marilyn, you may be interested in the site as well.)
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Thanks, Forgottenman.
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Find a grave couldn’t find her. I wonder if he didn’t actually bury her but had her cremated. To save a bit of money. Cremation is cheap.
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But surely he put the ashes somewhere. Are there no relatives who would know?
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Beautifully written! Your words paint such vivid emotions
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