Nuggets I picked up from my dog, No. 5

A Glowing Vat of Cheese

 

   Freed from his leash, Coffee J. Dogg seems a different animal. With the world now his fire hydrant he bops along with bushy tail motoring back and forth like a Grandfather clock on Cialis.

A dog and his boy

Nuggets: Being bits of wisdom gleaned from daily walks with my dog, Coffee (at left). He had a soft, furry head and he never complained. He left for stars unknown in 2010.

He has taken to plopping down on select lawns, then rolling over and wiggling back and forth, dark-siding the neighborhood with legs akimbo. This seems to make him delirious with joy.

   An old man in jogging attire walked by the other day, red-faced and huffing, possibly even infarcting. He stopped to watch Coffee doing his thing. “Boy,” said the old timer. “I wish I could do that.”

   Man, don’t we all. Allowing Coffee plenty of time to scratch his itch and sniff every tree and shrub has taught me the value of seeing as opposed to looking. You can open your eyes as wide as they will go and look to the four winds and the seven seas and the whole nine yards but see nothing.

   Looking is easy. Seeing, however, is the permission you give yourself to look and see and to exclaim about 500 times a day “Well, I’ll be dipped in cheese!” If you’re not in the seeing-eye mode, you are looking in the wrong direction.

   Took me only one walk to learn that.  The first time Coffee and I did our leashless thing, I strapped on my iPod and set off with bluegrass jiggling the earwax. With my eyes focused absently on the sidewalk, a car backing down a driveway nearly got me.

   Brain to eyeballs: Look up. See car. Avoid death.

   Up, of course, is where they keep the stars and the birds and those long fly balls hit deep to right. It’s not a bad place to check out every now and then, but if you’re always in a hurry, the upside of life gets downgraded. As long as the sky isn’t falling, why tempt fate by looking at it?

   I’ve since resolved that earphones may be nice for long airplane rides, but for walks with the dog they close off any chance of having an original thought. Some people do their most creative thinking in the shower. It’s not a bad place to think, I’ll admit, but usually when I’m hosing down the abs I’m in mid-golden-oldie, trying to think of the third verse to something like “The Man Who Shot Liberty Valence.”

   This invariably sends me off on a trip to the elephant grooveyard where I’m channeling Gene Pitney, scrubbing my head and belting out “No it isn’t very pretty what a town without pity caaaaaan dooooooo.”

   Because I do not multi-task well while soaking wet, dog walking affords me my best chance to look in, out and up, to air out the grey matter and conjure some weighty ideas.

Thus have I noticed birds I never saw before. I can almost tell the difference between a Junco and a Chickadee. I see a tree and ask myself “Isn’t that a river birch?”

   I’ve looked at the sky so many times in the past several months and seen the panoply of stars and jets and clouds up there that it’s second nature now to look up indoors as well as out. I went into the Giant the other day and while waiting at the meat counter I checked out the ceiling. Enormous! All I ever looked for in the past was where they were hiding the pickles.

   Perhaps my biggest discovery of things up there that I had previously taken for granted is the moon. One evening on our dog walk I noted that the moon. It was visible in the low sky, all the way down our street, just a slim silver crescent of itself. Terms from science classes past boiled up through the Liberty Valence lyrics: Waxing Crescent. Or was it Waning Crescent?

   Wow, I was remembering the phases of the moon that I’d heard but hadn’t really learned in high school. Maybe it was seventh grade. I get them confused. So anyway, about 10 evenings later as Coffee and I walked down the same street. I looked up and was stunned. No moon. What the…? How can that be?

   A few minutes later we turned around and headed back home. And there, perched over our house in all its yellow and orange candy-corn beauty was old Mr. Moon. Or maybe it was Young Mr. Moon. I was definitely going to have to get a book.

   When I got back, Katherine asked me what was up.

   “The moon,” I said. “Did you know that it moves all over the place?”

   It turns out she did know that, but knew nothing about the ceiling at Giant.

   Coffee J. Dogg and I both slept easy that night and I dreamed of a glowing vat of cheese.

Note: For more about Coffee J. Dogg and the origins of these essays, click on the menu bar “Nuggets I Picked Up From My Dog”

©Patrick A. McGuire and A Hint of Light 2013, all rights reserved.

Posted in Dogs I Have Known, The human comedy | Tagged , , , | 6 Comments

Descartes on baseball

 I think, therefore I’m thinking of sports

By Renee “Buzz” Descartes

  We can no longer pretend it isn’t happening—this terrible scandal sweeping professional baseball. I’m talking, of course, about the flagrant use of performance enhancing rugs (PERs).

Every day, hundreds of baseball players cheat by lying down on small rugs between innings and at bats and even network time outs to catch a quick, restorative 40 winks.

These are the same type of rugs we used in kindergarten during nap time, just a bit larger and often personalized with a team’s colors or a player’s favorite cartoon animal.

There is no question that in-game use of rugs enhances a player’s ability to throw a baseball to a desired spot or to see the ball coming in time to shout “Holy crap!” and whack it out of the way. I don’t know about you, but my performance in daily life always kicks into a higher gear after I’ve rolled out my little carpet and gone night-night.

What’s sad is that PERs are not only ignored by baseball leadership, they are condoned. The next time you see a slugger take a bat to a dugout phone or water fountain, watch how he suddenly disappears down the tunnel. Why? Because his manager has sent him to the team rug room for a time out.

It’s gotten so out of hand that some players violate league policy against the use of sippy cups in conjunction with their rug abuse. A few of the richest even travel with a professional story teller for a quicker trip to Snoretown.

Sports fans, something has to be done. Wake me when it’s over.

Why they call it baseball

One of the most misunderstood terms in all of baseball—more confusing than the infield fly rule or the hidden umpire trick–is Tommy John surgery.

It seems like every other day some pitcher tears or snaps that little gristle socket thingie that keeps his shoulder from flying off when a ball is thrown—sometimes going further than the ball itself.

Yet thousands of fans–many who never went to medical school, or who transferred into more lucrative career fields like driving a truck for a fracking company—misunderstand the Tommy John concept. They believe that an injured player is sent off to a body shop where a factory authorized gristle-rep snaps a new shoulder-arm assembly into place in a procedure invented by Tommy John.

Not true. Tommy John did not invent Tommy John surgery. What he did was perform the world’s first Tommy John surgery–on himself, i.e. Tommy John. And yes, it hurt like sixty.

An amusing footnote: While Tommy’s surgery was successful, he realized too late that he’d inadvertently snapped his shoulder on backwards. For the rest of his career he had to pitch facing second base, and instead of being a lefty he was now a right hander. As Tommy chuckled “That’s why they call it baseball.”

Curiously, when athletes have need of this procedure, they don’t just go to a mysterious bone cracker in Alabama or to Billy Ray Cyrus. They go directly to Tommy John’s house where he performs all operations on his dining room table (after the dishes have been cleared.)

In fact at Tommy John Surgery, Inc.,® the motto says it all: “Because when your arm falls off, the last thing you want is a catcher trying to stick it back on.”

©Patrick A. McGuire and A Hint of Light 2013, all rights reserved.

Posted in News You Can Use (Sort of) | Tagged , , , | 8 Comments

Nuggets I picked up from my dog, No. 4

Out In Real Life

Bought Coffee J. Dogg one of those new-age leash thingies, the ones with the spring-loaded cord coiled inside an industrial strength  plastic housing—sometimes  known as a handle.

Coffee J. Dogg and unidentified syncophant

Being bits of wisdom gleaned from daily walks with my dog, Coffee. He had a soft, furry head and he never complained. He left for stars unknown in 2010.

That a simple dog’s leash could evolve into something with a handle or be associated with the legerdemain of gizmology says much, probably too much, about our civilization. The Gizmo Wind long ago carried off the hopelessly inane idea of using a length of clothesline to walk the dog. It’s the very same force that replaced the old-fangled, no-tech push-broom with a gas-powered, sonic-booming leaf blower. Or introduced to our bathrooms an electronic toothbrush that can strip paint off a tool shed but still leave a little piece of spinach between your front teeth.

With his new leash and a smart red collar I took Coffee to the vet where we were awarded the coveted metallic rabies tag without which no civilized dog is complete or legal. We were now, in the parlance of dog walking, good to go.

It wasn’t as complicated in my boyhood and doghood days in Syracuse. Like the dinosaurs, which had only recently died out, neighborhood dogs roamed the land at will. They would leave home in the morning, snoop the sniff out of a hundred hydrants, take care of their business wherever they pleased, then at dusk they would deliver their “I’m back” bark. Given a warm place to sleep, they would replay their day’s mysterious adventures in quivering dreams of whimper and woof.

From Day One, Coffee struggled mightily at the taut end of his leash. When I wanted to go one way and he another he would sit his hundred pound can down and refuse to budge while I cajoled and tugged. If a neighbor passed by, he broke into the high drama of pretending he was choking to death.

 “Oh dear,” a school bus Mom said to me one morning as the coughing, hacking hound threw her a desperate glance with conniving brown eyes. “It sounds like he’s choking to death.”

 “It does, doesn’t it?” I smiled, hauling in on the leash to keep the faker from sniffing a nearby foreign pant leg.

For days Coffee and I sparred over where I wanted him to go and at what speed he refused to get there. One day a sullen teenager appeared, dragging a small choking dog at the end of a leash. She hauled him roughly into an open space where scofflaws take their dogs in the dark of night to unload the groceries. I think of it as Poop Central. The sullen teen hollered at the quivering dog “Come on! Poop!”

Nothing like watching a metaphor unfold before your eyes. I identified with the sad little pup even as I gripped my plastic handle against the strainings of my own aggrieved hound. In perfect keeping with the ancient struggle between the powerful and the powerless, the dog at the end of the teenager’s leash played the only card available. It refused to be so demeaned, as if righteously yipping You may choke me but you can never make me do do doodley do do.

For it’s small rebellion the pup was dragged unceremoniously back around the corner to its house with punitive rage. Once at home, I could imagine the teenage girl exchanging that leash for a collar around her own neck as her parents screamed.”Come on! Get a scholarship to Harvard!”

Thus is the play called Life so often staged: child versus dog, parent versus child, Big Cheese Editor versus Lowly Reporter, The Spouse Who Holds the Hoop versus The Spouse Who Jumps Through It. Always, just the two possibilities. You either hold the leash or you struggle against it.

But is there no gray between black and white? No trust between Mr. Outside and Mr. Inside? No warmth between The North Pole and South Pole? Does one always have to be colder than the other? Without the leash, my exterior persona argued, I couldn’t trust Coffee J. Dogg not to run off, not to make a mess in somebody’s yard, not to bite someone and send me to the poorhouse. Yes, but an enchanting interior voice countered, the leash means you don’t trust him to be a real dog, a true dog, a man’s best friend dog.

I was fortunate that Coffee came to us with three or four commands pre-programmed during his life with our son, Brendan. Considering this the next day, Coffee and I went out without the leash. When he charged ahead, I shouted “Stay!” Doggone if he didn’t sit down and stay. Just as rules make it safe for everyone, obedience, I could see with surprise, does have its place.

The treaty we agreed to was this: Coffee wears his collar, I carry the leash, though unattached. If we meet a neighbor or a dog who does not know him, we hook up. When the action passes, we unhook. When a command is ignored, we hook up and stay hooked up for the rest of the walk. This is how football strikes are resolved and wars ended. It’s pretty much why we have a United Nations.

Thus have dog and master become a team. Coffee putters on happily ahead, smelling whatever he wants, but never goes out of my sight. He stays when he reaches a corner and drops the odd bit of garbage when I tell him to “Leave it!” He sits passively with groups of kids and allows them to pet him, then follows after me when it’s time to move on.

Now, whenever he decides to sit on a neighbor’s lawn to view the world at leisure from a different angle, I no longer strain heart and muscle trying to move him. I let him sit. I use such moments to muse about the meaning of life, the meaning of death and the letter I’m going to write nominating myself for a MacArthur genius grant.

I see myself chilling out before his very snout. No comment yet from the dog, but I believe his inner wise guy has to be impressed that you can still be a real dog and get in plenty of interesting sniffs without acting like the Hound of the Baskervilles. The possibilities for the two of us now seem endless. I’m waiting with great curiosity to see how it all plays out in real life.

Note: For more about Coffee J. Dogg and the origins of these essays, click on the menu bar “Nuggets I Picked Up From My Dog”

©Patrick A. McGuire and A Hint of Light 2013, all rights reserved.

Posted in Dogs I Have Known, The human comedy | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

F.A.Q. The Dishwasher

Q. Are the dishes in the dishwasher clean or dirty?

A. Dirty. I think.

Q. Didn’t you run them last night?

A. Me? Um I…don’t think so.

Q. They look clean.

A. Then they’re clean. Probably. Maybe.

Q. Ooh, gross. Look at this pot.

A. Oops. I just put that in there. Forgot.

Q. You put a dirty pot in with the clean stuff?

A. I thought they were dirty. I did say oops.

Q. So everything else is clean?

A.  That’s not necessarily a logical conclusion. Look, I’m trying to do a sudoku.

Q. Jeezy weezy! Somebody put a coffee cup where the small plates are supposed to go.

A. Somebody? There’s just you and me.

Q. Why would I put a cup in the spot for plates? I have a system. I know exactly where everything goes.

A.  So you’re saying I put the cup in the wrong place?

Q. Unless it was a burglar.

A. Has it ever occurred to you that there is no right and wrong place for a cup to go in a dishwasher? You just put stuff in until there’s no more room.

Q. Do you know what would have happened if the Romans ran their empire with an attitude like that?

A. So. Now a history lesson.

Q. The barbarians would have cleaned their clocks about 300 years earlier than they did.

A. But not in a dishwasher.

Q. This coffee cup looks clean, by the way.

A. Does it have water on the bottom?

Q. It’s empty.

A. Right, but when you put the cup in there upside down, the outside bottom is at the top.

Q. I’m sorry, I must have left my PhD in physics in the car.

A. Sarcasm is the bounced check of an overdrawn wiseass.

Q. You stole that line from somebody. I think it was me.

A. So sometimes water collects in the top of the bottom of the cup. Which tells you the dishwasher was on. Probably.

Q. Okay, the bottom doesn’t have water in it or on it.

A. It could have been wet and then the water evaporated. That’s always a possibility. Or maybe there never was water on the top of the bottom.

Q. Uh oh. I just noticed that the little cup thingie you’re supposed to fill up with dishwasher liquid is full.

A.  Aha. Sounds like somebody forgot to turn it on last night.

Q. Somebody? There’s just the two of us.

A. Don’t forget the burglar.

 

©Patrick A. McGuire and A Hint of Light 2013, all rights reserved.

Posted in F.A.Q., The human comedy | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

Nuggets I Picked up from my dog, No. 3

The Bus Stop Dog

Before Coffee J. Dogg moved in, Katherine and I worried a bit about the friendliness of the neighborhood. There’s really nothing not to like about our little street, but after  three years we didn’t really know anybody and they didn’t seem to know us.

Coffee J. Dogg and unidentified syncophant

Being bits of wisdom gleaned from daily walks with my dog, Coffee. He had a soft, furry head and he never complained. He left for stars unknown in 2010.

 When the people next door moved away we realized we’d never known their names. We told ourselves we were just private people, that’s all. The neighborhood was full of young couples and their children. Our kids have been scattered for some time, leaving Katherine and me feeling prematurely gray and disconnected. We even talked of moving to a friendlier place.

 When John and his wife Heather, a couple in their late 20s, moved in next door I immediately overpowered them with hearty handshakes, offers of beers, the loan of my drill and fascinating conversation anytime they wanted. I’d shout “Hi John!” as he drove off to work or was out mowing his lawn or calming his pair of poodles. Slowly, it became clear that John had his own drill and wasn’t starved for conversation.

 Then Coffee J. Dogg became a permanent part of our household. Overnight I became a dog walker. Until then I had spent exactly no time walking through the neighborhood. I’d get up in the morning, commute down into the basement, park myself in my swivel chair, turn on the computer, and work as a freelancer for eight hours. At the end of the day, with no evening rush, I climbed the basement stairs.

 With a dog in need of regular walks, though, I now found myself outside three times a day. To my surprise, the sight of me plodding uphill in the morning and downhill in the evening, has become a familiar one to the rest of the neighborhood. I’ve became especially well-known at school-bus stops in the mornings where Coffee sits and kids pet his head and tell him how soft is his fur. He looks off into the distance, pretending not to notice or care, but as soon as they stop, he looks pleadingly to them for more attention. Except for the fur and the pretending not to care, I’m a lot like that myself.

 On our walks, we’ll come upon groups of kids who shout out Coffee’s name or say something like “It’s the bus stop dog!” For a few weeks I got zero attention while Coffee built up a fan base of school bus kids ranging far afield from our hood. I’d find myself driving to the cleaners with Coffee in the back seat and hear kid voices hollering “Hi Coffee!” as I drove past. Once, as the hound and I sat in traffic at a stop light, two unfamiliar adults in the car beside us hollered out “Hi Coffee!”

 Gradually I found myself stopping to chat with the parents of these kids, talking about the weather or baseball or whatever. It wasn’t long before I’d nod a hello to half a dozen neighbors, then maybe a dozen. Once a woman stopped me at the supermarket and said “Oh you’re the man with the bus stop dog. I knew you looked familiar.” Yes, I admitted, I am familiar.

 One night Coffee and I stopped to chat with Paul, a neighbor down the street. He happened to mention Scott, my next door neighbor. I looked in the direction of the house next to mine, the one occupied by John and Heather and their two poodles.

 “His name is Scott?”

 Paul nodded.

 “I’ve been calling him John for two years.”

 Paul shook his head. “I think one of his dogs is named John.”

 The next night when Coffee and I approached home I saw John out in his yard with his poodles. From about 15 feet away I hollered “John!” He and one of the dogs turned around.

 “John,” I said as I caught up to him. “Um, is your name Scott?”

 John’s face turned red. “I was going to tell you,” he said. “I was always embarrassed to correct you. I knew one day we’d have to have this conversation.”

 As Coffee and John (the poodle) sniffed each other’s psyches, I shared a friendly chuckle with Scott—the neighbor formerly known as John. After that I moved seamlessly into a friendly chat about satellite dishes.

 Back in the house, I told Katherine that John was now Scott. The next day she found him watering his lawn. She told him she’d heard about the mix-up of names. Scott blushed.

 “I guess I was just reluctant to correct Daniel.”

 Katherine smiled and cocked her head. “Who’s Daniel?”

 “Your husband?” said John, er, Scott.

 Since then I’ve come to see my little neighborhood as a not so unfriendly place. I walk the dog and wave at neighbors whose names I may or may not know and I get a wave back from people who can’t think of my  name, but they know I  look familiar.  “Hey, it’s what’s his name, the guy with the bus stop dog.”

Note: For more about Coffee J. Dogg and the origins of these essays, click on the menu bar “Nuggets I Picked Up From My Dog”

©Patrick A. McGuire and A Hint of Light 2013, all rights reserved.

Posted in Dogs I Have Known, The human comedy | Tagged , , | 4 Comments

Fish story No. 2

The truth about fishing is this: no matter how much a fisher dude raves about the spiritual rejuvenation of being one with nature, in your typical 8-hour day of fishing on the lake that fisher dude doesn’t actually see that much of nature.

Rather than this,

Unidentified fat white cloud does the Macarena over Oak Lake, Ontario, Canada

Unidentified fat white cloud does the Macarena over Oak Lake, Ontario, Canada

he sees mostly this:

My Eyes Glaze Over

My Eyes Glaze Over

Which is okay as long as you look up every few minutes to savor the beauty. But if you do, then Mr. Walleye, who is hungry but not stupid, is going to snork your minnow.

When one reels in his line and finds an empty jig he gets the dreaded, your-minnow-done-been-snorked taunt from his colleagues.

Somebody always blurts “Ho! Fishing on credit!” (HOFOC). No distracting wonders of nature for them, just hour after hour of staring intently at the four-foot square of water in front of them.

On the positive side, those “Where’s Walleye?” moments are an opportunity for long-postponed soul-searching on the who-am-I/where-am-I-going spectrum. Unfortunately it doesn’t take much knocking about in the clutter of a contused soul before eyes begin to glaze over like a Sunday donut.

Experts refer to this as Pre-Snoring/Head Nodding/Eyeball Rolling Syndrome (PSHNERS), known in the literature as Pishner’s Spalpeen. Outside the literature most of us just refer to it as Nap Attack (NA) which, incidentally, is one of the leading causes of HOFOC.

In any case, the action of the sun on rippling water has a hypnotic effect and can produce bizarre dreamy thoughts. For instance, while staring at the water I wondered: if someone says ‘Have a great day!’ and I do have a great day, am I obligated to go back to that someone and say thanks?

And if winning the lottery was what made my great day a great day, do I need to tip them? Is fifty bucks enough?

Fortunately I didn’t win the lottery. But in another hypnotic moment  I saw myself in the TSA line at the airport. A sign warned: “We take all jokes very seriously.” I said “Gorilla walks into a bar…”

Three TSA types took me aside and grilled me for hours about which bar, how many gorillas, what is their religion, who is their favorite dobro player, do they have a face book page, do they believe in global warming, do they have barbecues on Sunday and invite non-gorilla friends over, when they do the hokey pokey, which foot do they put in first: left or right?

As I snapped out of that, the guy beside me, a novice, asked “Do fish have any other activities during the day besides just swimming and eating?”

The third guy in the boat jerked his head up in mid-nap attack. “You mean like bowling?” He shook his head. “Don’t think so.”

And he was right. If God wanted fish to bowl He would have given them fingers to hold the ball. Instead He gave us the fingers so we could bowl and fish.

Which doesn’t seem fair, but it all works out. Because fish don’t have to deal with the TSA and can keep all of their lottery winnings.

©Patrick A. McGuire and A Hint of Light 2013, all rights reserved.

Posted in The human comedy | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Nuggets I picked up from my dog, No. 1

Where our souls meet

The hound who walks me twice daily is a used dog. In fact, each of the previous dogs of my acquaintance over three-score years started out with someone else but by serendipity and a nose for an easy biscuit, sniffed its way to my seductive patronage. Some years ago when the last of them passed tearfully from my sight, I painfully resolved to be done with dogs forever.

Coffee J. Dogg and unidentified syncophant

Being bits of wisdom gleaned from daily walks with my dog, Coffee. He had a soft, furry head and he never complained. He left for stars unknown in 2010.

But beware of resolutions sworn to at night in a veterinarian’s cold lobby. The truth is, you are done with dogs only when dogs say you are done and not the reverse. Because, while there are those—many of them good intentioned—who love cats, ferrets, parakeets, hamsters and pot bellied pigs, I have evolved from a long line of dog people. When I meet a dog on the street, or in the home of a friend, I give it the secret scratch and speak kind words very softly in its ear. Not dog whispering. Think of it as soul melding. Dogs always seem to like me–because I like them.

Some years ago, with our children grown and flown, I began talking to goodwife Katherine about hiring a large, retired dog for the house. A professional dog, strictly business, no close attachments. Someone to scare away burglars. Katherine, rolling her eyes as she does, saw through it immediately.

Before I could launch my recruiting campaign, the love child of a pedigreed chocolate Labrador retriever and a vagabond, border collie snouted its way into our lives. A large, solid black creature full of bound and woof (I used to be like that myself), he’d been fired at birth by his disgusted breeders for an imperfect pedigree. A good soul—our youngest son, Brendan—caught sight of his wagging tail and saved him from the knackers.

Brendan acquired the dog not long before his wife gave birth to their first child. It’s hard enough to raise a baby without a bounding, drooling hound anxious to take your arm for a run. The story gets shaggier over the years, and includes Brendan getting laid off from his job as a video game designer and then a divorce. Suffice it to say that Katherine and I, sometime back, ended up with an eight-year-old dog, his 50 pound bags of food, his arthritis, otitis and thyroid condition.

He also came with a name: Coffee.

When we are out for a walk and a neighbor stops to chat and learns the dog’s name, invariably comes the comment “I guess you like your coffee black.” But I’m one of those odd freaks of nature who does not drink coffee. It’s because I am just not a sipper. I like to take long gulps of whatever it is I’m drinking—water, beer, milk, tomato juice. As a boy, gulping hot drinks produced enough scalded tongues and melted throats that I finally realized I had a drinking problem.

Anyway, Brendan, a serious coffee drinker, was not thinking of coffee the beverage when he named his dog. He was thinking of the Hall of Fame defenseman for the Pittsburgh Penguins, the Philadelphia Flyers, The Detroit Red Wings, etc., etc., No. 77 from Weston, Ontario, Paul Coffey.

When I explain this to the casual Coffee-petter, I am often met with an eyes-glazed-over disconnect. A sad commentary on the poor job our schools have done in educating us on who is who in the National Hockey League.

There’s another name complication, though, one of my own making. I bought one of those personalized dog tags and in a flash of inspiration had it inscribed “Coffee J. Dogg.” Now, Coffee-petters invariably ask “What’s the J stand for?”

“Jejune,” I said one day to a young mother with two toddlers in tow.

“Did you say June?”

“No,” I said. “Jejune. It’s French.”

As usual, a long pause here.

“And you really don’t drink coffee?”

“It means impossibly young and innocent,” I said. “Supremely childlike.”

“I was born in June,” she said. “My husband is April.”

We walked on then—Coffee, bored by the talk and anxious to sniff out a young pup ahead. Me, wondering how a guy ends up with a name like April.

As used dogs go, Coffee J. Dogg has worked out well. So far, no yapping, no burglars, no sentimental attachments. Everything strictly professional. (Katherine is rolling her eyes again).

When Coffee sits next to my chair at night, I can reach out and pet his soft, furry head and say to him “Good boy.” He stares ahead with stoic pride and as much grace as is possible while dangling a dripping, slightly skewed tongue and panting out invisible wiggly waves of weapons-grade halitosis.

A few years ago I planned on naming my next dog Henry, a dignified handle I thought for a retired dog. I suppose I could have given this one Henry for a middle name. But Coffee H. Dogg just doesn’t have the same ring to it. Besides, while his youthful bound has long been tempered by his easily inflamed joints, he is still the forever two- year-old: impossibly young and innocent. A child, really.

That, says Katherine—along with the soft head—is surely where our souls meet.

Note: For more about Coffee J. Dogg and the origins of these essays, click on the menu bar “Nuggets I Picked Up From My Dog”

©Patrick A. McGuire and A Hint of Light 2013, all rights reserved.

Posted in Dogs I Have Known, The human comedy | Tagged , , | 7 Comments