So Long, Good Buddy, Our Foster Dog

The call came on Monday morning.

The man who had come to our house sev­eral weeks ago, decided he wanted Buddy and reim­bursed us for what we spent on him at the vet, was com­ing back to pick him up. He had been trav­el­ing through­out the past few weeks and I told him he could leave Buddy with us until he got back and could con­cen­trate on build­ing a rela­tion­ship with his new 4-legged boy.

This was our first fos­ter­ing expe­ri­ence, mostly because I felt I couldn’t do it and would get too attached. After all, 3 of our 4 cur­rent dogs were to go into a res­cue, but once I had them, I couldn’t let them go.

I knew from almost the begin­ning that Buddy wasn’t ours and so I tried not to let a bond develop. I read arti­cles on fos­ter­ing dogs, I tried the tricks other fos­ters use. I tried to con­cen­trate on his faults (this was hard, as he was truly one of the best dogs we’ve ever had). I tried to remind myself I didn’t like male dogs (again, hard since he didn’t find it nec­es­sary to pee on every­thing). I told myself we didn’t have the space (but he had found a bed and cor­ner all his own).

Buddy was doing well here, he had come out of his shell and wasn’t quite as shy. He had almost quit duck­ing every time we reached to pet him. He had a rou­tine, got along well with the other dogs and even joined in howl­ing ses­sions before mealtime.

By last week­end, our friends were ask­ing if we were just going to give the money back the new owner paid on the vet bills and tell him we couldn’t give him up.
We thought about it.

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