Dachshund Poetry
Miss Millie &
Bob Barkers
Poetry
A Message From Max

My name is Max and I have a little something I'd like to whisper in your ear.

I know that you humans lead busy lives. Some have to work, some have childrento raise.

It always seems like you are running here and there, often much to fast, often never noticing the truly grand things in life.

Look down at me now, while you sit there at your computer.

See they way My dark brown eyes look at yours? They are slightly cloudy now, that comes with age. The gray hairs are beginning to ring my soft muzzle. You smile at me;
I see love in your eyes. What do you see in mine?
Do you see a spirit, a soul inside who loves you as no other could in the world? A spirit that would forgive all trespasses of prior wrong doing for just a simple moment of your time?
That is all I ask. To slow down if even for a few minutes to be with me.

So many times you have been saddened by the words you read on that screen, of others of my kind passing. Sometimes we die young and oh so quickly,
sometimes so suddenly it wrenches your heart out of your throat. Sometimes we age so slowly before your eyes that you do not even seem to know, until they very end, when we look at you with grizzled muzzles and cataract clouded
eyes. Still the love is always there, even when we take that long sleep, to run free in distant lands.

I may not be here tomorrow; I may not be here next week. Someday you will shed the waters from your eyes, that human have when deep grief fills their souls, and you will be angry at yourself that you did not have just "One
more day" with me.

Because I love you so, your sorrow touches my spirit and grieves me. We have now, together. So come, sit down here next to me on the floor. And look deep into my eyes. What do you see? If you look hard and deep enough we will
talk you and I, heart to heart. Come to me not as "alpha" or as a "trainer" or even a "Mom or Dad", come to me as a living soul and stroke my fur and let us look deep into one another's eyes, and talk. I may tell you something about the fun of chasing a tennis ball, or I may tell you something
profound about myself, or even life in general. You decided to have me in your life (I hope) because you wanted a soul to share just such things with.

Someone very different from you, and here I am. I am a dog, but I am alive. I feel emotion, I feel physical senses, and I can revel in the differences ofour spirits and souls. I do not think of you as a "Dog on two feet" I know what you are. You are human, in all your quirkiness, and I love you
still. Now, come sit with me, on the floor. Enter my world, and let time slow down if even for only 15 minutes. Look deep in my eyes, and whisper to my ears. Speak with your heart, with your joy and I will know your true self. We may not have tomorrow, and life is oh so very short.

Love,
Max, (on behalf of all canines everywhere)

Before I Was A Dog Mom
by Carol Wat

Before I was a Dog Mom:

  I made and ate hot meals unmolested.
  I had unstained, unfurred clothes.
  I had quiet conversations on the phone, even if the doorbell rang.                                                                                  

Before I was a Dog Mom:

  I slept as late as I wanted
  And never worried about how late I got to bed
  or if I could get into my bed.

Before I was a Dog Mom:

  I cleaned my house every day.
  I never tripped over toys, stuffies, chewies
  Or invited the neighbor's dog over to play.

Before I was a Dog Mom:

  I didn't worry if my plants, cleansers, plastic bags,
  toilet paper, soap or deodorant
  were poisonious or dangerous.

Before I was a Dog Mom:

  I had never been peed on
  Pooped on
  Drooled on
  Chewed on
  Or pinched by puppy teeth.

Before I was a Dog Mom:

  I had complete control of
  My thoughts,
  My body and mind.
  I slept all night without sharing the covers or pillow.

Before I was a Dog Mom:

  I never looked into big, soulful eyes and cried.
  I never felt my heart break into a million pieces when I couldn't
    stop a hurt.
  I never knew something so furry and four-legged
    could affect my heart so deeply.

Before I was a Dog Mom:

  I had never held a sleeping puppy just because I couldn't put it down.
  I had never gotten up in the middle of the night every 10 minutes
    to make sure all was well.
  I didn't know how warm it feels inside to feed a hungry puppy.
  I didn't know that something so small could make me feel so important.                                                                                        

Before I was a Dog Mom:

  I had never known the warmth,
  the joy, the love, the heartache,
  the wonderment or the satisfaction of being
  A Dog Mom.

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