Archive for July, 2009

Dogs Save Lifes…read this…

Monday, July 27th, 2009

A German lady, Irena Sendler, died a year ago at age 98.

During WWII, she got permission to work in the  Warsaw Ghetto

as a Plumbing/Sewer specialist.

She had an ”ulterior motive” as she knew what the

Nazis’ plans were for the Jews.

She smuggled infants out in the bottom of her tool box and

she carried out larger children in a burlap sack in the back of her truck.

She also had a dog she trained to bark when the

Nazi soldiers let her in and out of the ghetto.

The soldiers wanted nothing to do with the dog, and the

barking covered any noise of the children.

She managed to smuggle out and save 2500 little ones.

She was caught,  and the Nazis broke her

legs and arms and beat her severely.

She kept a record of the names of all the smuggled kids in a glass jar buried under a tree in her back yard.  After the war, she tried to locate any parents who had survived and reunited them with their children.

She then helped to place orphaned children into foster and adoptive homes.

In 2009, Irena Sendler was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize  . . .

She was not selected.

Al Gore won, for a slide show on Global Warming.

Free pet food programs

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

Brother can you spare some kibble? Free pet food programs

Gary E. SattlerGary E. Sattler RSS Feed
Jul 16th 2009 at 12:30PM
More
When times are tough for people, times are just as tough for their pets.

In fact, sometimes personal budget issues get so bad that people and their pets are required to part ways. If a family is struggling just to put food on it’s own table, that sometimes means Fido and his food dish have to go.

The struggle to keep beloved pets properly fed and at home, is the driving force behind a new wave of free pet food programs which is beginning to take hold across the country.

In some instances, the free pet food programs are initiated by local animal control and animal shelter agencies. Such is the case with a well received pet food program thriving in Floyd County, Ga.

Floyd County Animal Control was witnessing a startling increase in the number of surrendered animals due to economic conditions. It was decided that a free pet food assistance program might help many people keep their pets fed and at home.

With generous assistance from a Georgia based food company, Floyd County Animal Control now makes free pet food available to people who can verify their income difficulties in any of a number of simple ways.

In Muskegon, Mich., a free pet food program was born through the efforts of a couple of full-time students who were having trouble affording the expense of feeding their two dogs. In addition to making free pet food available to owners of dogs and cats, Pet Pantry of Michigan accepts donations of food for other small mammals, aquatic pets, and reptiles.

Through it’s network of donation centers and drop-off sites, Pet Pantry of Michigan also accepts donations of a full range of animal care products and also makes those items available to financially struggling pet owners. All a pet owner needs to do in order to take advantage of this free pet food program, is to show simple documentation which verifies their financial hardship.

The Food Bank for New York City, which has provided hunger relief to thousands of people, has also recently begun to provide free pet food to pet owners in dire straits. Staff there has recognized the importance of keeping families together with their pets.

The organization has indicated that the success of the program will be dependent upon a blend of donations and demand. At this point, Food Bank for New York City indicates that there is plenty of demand for the service.

It has been recommended that pet owners who are having trouble bearing the cost of feeding their pets should fully explore their options before parting with a beloved animal friend. Free pet food programs sometimes remain hidden in the shadows until you carefully look for them.

Local veterinarians and animal shelters should be contacted first about possible free pet food programs. Pet owners could also consider contacting local pet food retailers, animal control agencies, feed dealers, churches and even the local area chamber of commerce.

If all else fails, and a pet owner finds it necessary to surrender a household pet, it absolutely must be done in a controlled and responsible way. Please contact your local animal shelter or humane society for guidance in surrendering any domestic animal.

I’m Dog Weird, are you?

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

Growing Up Dog Weird
By
Susan Hartzler

For as long as I can remember, I’ve been an excellent judge of character: canine character. Looking back, that makes sense because my childhood dog, Siesta was the one who taught me about love and forgiveness. Because of my bond with that dog so early in life, I have always felt more comfortable with a canine by my side. I realize now that my family was embarrassed about my intense attachment to dogs. But right or wrong, I was (and still am) dog weird.

It’s not so strange when you consider I’m in excellent company. Take, for instance, Goddess Diana from Roman Mythology who shares my love and reverence for the canine spirit. She’s also found in Greek mythology as Artemis, the Goddess of the Moon, the heavenly light that illuminates the darkness, ruling the wilderness, the untamed frontiers of nature.

Diana was powerful and complex, celebrated as the goddess of childbirth, women, song, dance and animals. It’s interesting that the lunar Goddess loved dogs known to howl at the moon. In fact, dogs are one of Diana’s most sacred animals.

The Goddess of the Hunt is portrayed in images and statues with her long blonde hair wearing flowing dresses on her tall and slender body carrying a bow and arrow accompanied by her faithful dogs and a strong, young stag.

When I picture Diana, I am immediately transported back in time to my own backyard in the suburbs of Los Angeles where I played deer family with my childhood dog Siesta. She weighed only ten-pounds but she was my baby fawn and I was her mother doe, my backyard transformed into an enchanted forest of lush alpine meadows where we roamed freely in the fierce mists.

One cold December morning when I was about six, I snuck into my mom’s forbidden private drawer on a Christmas mission. I had been warned not to touch her things and never go near that dresser. But I had seen the bewitching bottles and jars of sweet smelling potions and lotions. That day, I just couldn’t help myself. So, I carefully pulled the drawer open when I was certain mom was in the kitchen and searched through her make-up. I knew exactly what I was looking for, passing the bottles of Clinique moisturizer that I wanted so badly to open. I had to hurry. At the very back of the drawer, I found it, the bright red lipstick in its sleek silver case. Grabbing it, I ran outside as fast as I could, bringing my little dog with me to our personal Eden, the best room in the house, our backyard – there anything was possible.

This vast half-acre, more a park than a yard, provided refuge to make up my own adventures where all I needed was my imagination and my dog. Surrounded by ivy draping down the fenced in space created my wonderland with a mature walnut tree perfect for climbing, a young lemon tree bearing the juiciest and most tart lemons I had ever tasted, and two giant Cyprus trees where squirrels loved to play hide-and-go seek, driving Siesta wild. That day in December, Siesta and I were heroes, with no one to bother us except Mother Nature.

Our initial step on our way to becoming Santa’s legends was for me to paint our noses red. Siesta first. I carefully took the red lipstick in my hand, grabbed her by the snout and smeared it onto her entire black nose. It was not easy. Lipstick is not meant to cover a wet doggie’s nose. On top of that, a squirrel bolted across our yard when I was only half way through. Siesta exploded out of my arms to give chase, breaking off the tip.

I picked up the broken piece, now covered in grass, and jammed it back in the tube. I applied red to my nose (with some hints of grass attached). Once in character, Siesta and I trotted around the yard. Right there under sunny skies, we had both magically transformed into two little Rudolph’s, the famous reindeer from Santa’s sleigh.

Siesta gave me her entire attention as I sang my favorite Christmas carol, Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer. She trotted by my side, her face looked up at me lovingly as we ran along the perimeter of the yard. Nothing else in the world mattered except the two of us. I imagined we were in Santa’s stable at the North Pole, outside the magical toy shop where little green elves were getting ready for the big night when dreams would come true for all the good little boys and girls around the world.

The sleigh was loaded and Santa got on board. We were about to take off, rounding the corners of the yard, running faster and faster. I was in the lead with Siesta keeping up directly at my feet, her little legs spreading out as far as they could go. Our red noses were brighter than the sun. My strides started to lengthen; I was leaping high in the air, the wind against my face. I heard Santa:

“What have you got on your face? Is that lipstick? Is that my lipstick on the dog?”

I tried to head Siesta off galloping in the opposite direction.

“Susan Frances, I’m speaking to you.” Oh no, she’s using my middle name, I thought.

“Mom, we’re about to take off. Santa needs us to guide his sleigh or else all the good children won’t get their presents.”

“If you don’t come here right now, Santa’s not going to bring you any presents, young lady. In fact, I have a mind to send you away to the North Pole. All by yourself.” She grabbed my hand and dragged me into the house.

Red nose or not, I used my imagination to play deer family all the time with Siesta, envisioning her as a gold fawn with white spots, her big pointy ears resembling a miniature deer in the wild. Other people remarked that she looked like a giant rat. She was supposed to be a full bred Chihuahua when we bought her at a local pet shop but my parents speculated later that she was most likely a terrier mix. Whatever she was, that small grey dog with dark brown soulful eyes looked like she stepped in white paint then used the tips of her feet to brush streaks on her tail and chest.

Siesta got her name because that was the only Spanish word my father knew. The instant she joined our family, I never wanted to go anywhere without her. When I wasn’t with her, I missed her fur’s nutty aroma and her tiny feet that smelled like corn chips. She was supposed to be the family pet but everyone knew Siesta was my dog. She slept with me. She followed me everywhere. I carried her around in my backpack. She drank from my Betsy Wetsy doll’s baby bottle and ate doughnuts and bologna while sitting in a high chair.

That gray wire-haired, goofy-looking dog meant everything to me. I felt lost without her. I pushed her in a toy baby carriage, secretly fed her scraps from the dinner table and cuddled with her all night. I even knit her a hat and scarf for the winter, complete with holes for her pointy ears to wear when it was chilly outside.

Leaving her all day long while I was at school seemed like cruel punishment to me, although I liked my 1st grade teacher Mrs. Berger. She was a nice looking woman with dark, short stylish hair, bangs framing her brown caring eyes. She wore matching sweater sets and skirts with flesh toned stocking that made a swishing sound as she passed by. I don’t ever remember hearing her raise her voice but she always managed to keep the class in line.

She smelled like my all time favorite Lilly of the Valley, those little white flowers that reminded me of bells. Mrs. Berger was very ladylike yet intelligent; explaining to us everything in the entire world there was to know. One day, we were asked to draw a picture of what we would like to be when we grew up.

There were pictures of astronauts and actresses, pilots and zoo keepers. As each student brought his special work of art to the front of the room, Mrs. Berger smiled with delight.

Then it was my turn. I had on my ginger colored peasant dress with my favorite desert boots. My mom begged me not to wear those shoes with dresses but I loved them. They were my absolute favorite; dark brown rubber soled suede booties that came to my ankles accented with white socks.

I stood up confidently with my picture, walked to the front of the room, turned it around and held it high above my head. I smiled as I looked around the room: my picture was the best of all and I knew it. Mrs. Berger looked at me in her lemon sweater set, her hands resting in her lap, her smile frozen like the mannequins I saw when I had to endure shopping excursions with my mom. I had drawn a deer like the one I pretended to be with Siesta in my backyard.

I scanned the classroom; my friends were laughing and pointing at me, my face flushed red in embarrassment. Quickly, I brought the picture down. Could I have been mistaken? My face turned sour, my eyes angry looking at the kids I thought were my friends. My stomach ached making flip flops as I stood there not knowing what to do next.

Mrs. Berger didn’t quite know what to either or what to say about my drawing of Rudolph, the famous reindeer from Santa’s sleigh, red nose and all.

“I see you chose Rudolph because he saved Christmas with his red nose,” she said, trying her best to give me a graceful way out.

“No, I choose Rudolph because I like him,” I shouted at her. I knew not to admit that I liked to pretend my little dog was my baby fawn.

“Okay Susie, let’s let someone else have a turn.” She motioned for me to sit down. I stomped back to my seat, defeated but determined that when I grew up I would show them all. I would become a reindeer one day.

Later that year for our Christmas pageant, I sang Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer while my dad took time off from work to accompany me on the piano. The entire school came to the auditorium to listen during the annual holiday assembly. I was more excited that my dad was there than nervous about performing in front of about 500 kids. Besides, I had a naturally beautiful singing voice.

As I belted out the words, I looked down; my brown desert boots turned into little reindeer hoofs and the stark white tiles of the floors transformed into snow banks. I closed my eyes and felt myself flying at remarkable speeds, the cold air and snow bothering me not one bit. I felt the pull of the sleigh as we landed on roof tops, Santa sliding down chimneys, leaving presents for all the world’s good little boys and girls. When I finished and the applause began, I opened my eyes. I took a bow and smiled. I had done the impossible. For just one moment, I had become Rudolph.

Word count: 1912

Susan Hartzler

17321 Dearborn St.

Northridge, CA 91325

818-998-6299

susan@alphadogpr.com

Baldwin & Bliss support LA Animal Services and found out how you can too with a Free Booth at this special event!

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

LA Animal Services wants to start promoting adoptions and are asking for
vendors. It is all free to you. Contact Anna below if you are interested

We are having this event hoping and trying  anything to help  attract and
educate people
It is tentatively August 8th from 10-3 we would set up booths
for vendors No cost
we actually like to do 2 things promoting our shelter
(because we have tons of pets) and as well as have vendors get promoted in
our community. It would be held here at North Central in our training yard
maybe food games music vendors etc.. our Neighbor community council is
helping us to help promote our shelter. Many locals they don’t even know we
are here.

Anna Hernandez
NEW HOPE/BABY BOTTLE
FOSTER PROGRAM COORDINATOR
North Central Animal Services
3201 Lacy St.
Los Angeles Ca. 90031
Shelter (213)485-5767 (preferred)
Fax (213)847-0555
Cell (213)305-4096
Business Hours Tues-Sat. 8-5
Email: Ani.newhopenc@lacity.org
www.laanimalservices.com

Baldwin & Bliss are proud of their Mommy

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

Susan Hartzler was interviewed for this article on Dating a Dog Lover. See what she and others had to say about the subject. What do you think?

Baldwin & Bliss want to know. Have you visited Spa Luce Yet?

Monday, July 6th, 2009

Spa Luce Offers Calm In The Midst Of Chaos

by Deidre Woollard Jul 4th 2009 at 11:01AM


The Hollywood and Highland Center in Los Angeles doesn’t exactly inspire thoughts of blissed-out spa moments but ascend from the parking lot and up to Level 5 of the Renaissance Hollywood Hotel and the world falls away a bit. Spa Luce is a beautiful and tranquil place to grab a little peace in the middle of a bustling area. The decor is modern and spare and the treatments are designed to be holistic and recharge body and mind.

Spa Luce features skincare and body care products and treatments by Red Flower, Sonya Dakar and Somme Institute as well as a signature scent created for Spa Luce by Dr. Sharon, an aromatherapist, acupuncturist, chiropractor and masseuse. One of the most extensive experiences offered by the spa is the hammam ritual. The multi-step massage ritual includes a cleansing with Moroccan mint tea and silt, a vigorous scrub with coffee, olive stones and fresh lemons, and a wrap in rhassoul clay. Finally after all that preparation you surrender to a Turkish massage with essences of cardamom, jasmine, bergamot, amber and clove. The 80-minute experience costs $180.

You can extend your Spa Luce experience by taking ample time to enjoy the facilities. Treatments include access to the eucalyptus-infused steam rooms and rooftop pool. Spa lunches can also be ordered up and eaten in the relaxation area or next to the pool. And you can also buy products to take home. Dr. Sharon’s Am I Dreaming aromatherapy kit, shown above, includes an aromatherapy oil, an aromatherapy candle, the Aromatin fragrance dispenser, and an instruction booklet. It sells for $48.

Looking for work? Animal Healthcare Technicians Are Still In High Demand

Sunday, July 5th, 2009

Helping Patients Get Back on All Four Feet

By JULIE WEED

Published: July 4, 2009

MARY ANN BAIK left her job as an office manager five years ago to follow her childhood dream of working with animals. Now she spends her nights tending sick and injured pets at the intensive care unit of an animal clinic in Los Altos, Calif.

Jessica Brandi Lifland for The New York Times

Mary Ann Baik, center, an animal health care technician, at work at the Adobe Animal Hospital in Los Altos, Calif. Demand for the technicians is strong.

Ms. Baik helps with triage when animals arrive, monitors those in critical condition and assists with surgery. She also checks blood pressure and breathing rates and changes dressings on wounds. Rodents, reptiles and birds have all spent time in the unit, but a majority of the patients are dogs and cats.

She also tries to keep the animals calm. This is especially important because one animal’s stress level can affect that of the others, especially in the case of cats, she said.

“We call it ‘bad cat syndrome’ when a stressed-out feline comes in and causes all the other cats to get riled up,” she said, adding that stress is also known to delay healing.

Despite increases in the overall unemployment rate, animal health care technicians like Ms. Baik continue to be in demand. In 2006, there were about 145,000 such technicians, and the number is growing faster than in most other types of occupations, according to the Bureau of Labor and Statistics.

Various factors keep these types of jobs strong. In veterinary offices, medical advancements and increased use of pet health insurance mean an increase in animal procedures, said Henry Kasper, a supervisory economist at the bureau. “If there’s a way to help a pet, owners are going to ask for it,” he said.

Job opportunities will continue to be excellent, Mr. Kasper said, because the 150 or so veterinary technology programs graduated only about 3,000 people last year — not enough to meet demand.

The work of an animal technician can vary enormously, depending on the job. Some administer medication, provide postoperative care or draw blood for lab tests. Tasks can be mundane, such as daily cage cleaning, or leading edge, such as DNA analysis of genes involved in mouse brain development.

Most technicians work in veterinary offices, but thousands work in university labs, at biotechnology or pharmaceutical companies or in other settings. Highly regulated product-development procedures at these companies mean that demand for these skills will endure despite economic downturns, according to George Goodno, a spokesman for the Biotechnology Industry Organization in Washington.

“Federal requirements for drug and treatment testing don’t go away because the economy is bad,” he said.

Kevin I. Phelps, a senior lab animal technician at the SUNY Upstate Medical University research facility in Syracuse, focuses on minimizing the stress of the animals in his care.

“If they aren’t properly cared for and they get anxious,” he said, “their blood pressure goes up, their hormone levels change, and we end up with inaccurate test results.”

In a job that he says is different every day, Mr. Phelps has brought in toys to keep mice occupied and managed postoperative care for animals that had undergone new knee-replacement and kidney-transplant procedures.

Mr. Phelps also does public outreach to educate people about animal testing. “Animal research can be controversial,” he said, “but it’s a component of virtually every drug and medical advancement we have.”

While veterinary technicians learn many things on the job, most have formal training. And most states, though not all, have guidelines for credentials.

Ms. Baik completed a two-year veterinary technology program at a technical college. Mr. Phelps’s training includes an undergraduate degree in zoology.

Professional organizations offer continuing-education opportunities.

“It’s definitely important to keep learning,” Ms. Baik said. “The animals can’t communicate a lot with you, so incorporating the best new practices help you deliver the best care.”

She is currently pursuing advanced training in emergency and critical care.

PAY varies considerably in the field. Veterinary technicians made an average of $36,120 in 2007, with increases accompanying more training or specialized skills, according to the National Association of Veterinary Technicians in America.

In lab settings, entry-level laboratory animal technicians earned an average salary of $30,262 in 2007, while more highly trained animal health care technicians made an average of $44,382, according to a study by the American Association for Laboratory Animal Science, based in Memphis. The association has certification designations for technicians at different levels.

Positions at biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies pay more, on average, than those in university settings, with animal health care technicians at the companies making an average of $73,538, the study found.

Along with the satisfaction of caring for animals and feeling that he is advancing science, Mr. Phelps enjoys talking to his own primary care doctor about his lab work, because he expects animal research to translate into improved medical practices for humans.

“I tell him I know what procedures he’ll be using in eight or so years,” he said, “because we’re figuring them out right now.”

The World of PR Has Officially Changed! Baldwin & Bliss Want You to Know….

Sunday, July 5th, 2009

Spinning the Web: P.R. in Silicon Valley

Photo illustration by The New York Times

By CLAIRE CAIN MILLER

Published: July 4, 2009

Menlo Park, Calif. — Brooke Hammerling (publicist) and Erin McKean (entrepreneur) are in a Sand Hill Road conference room, hashing out plans to unveil Ms. McKean’s new Web site, Wordnik.

Peter DaSilva for The New York Times

Donna Sokolsky Burke, co-founder of the firm Spark PR, with Alex Edelstein at a friend’s birthday party in San Francisco. She says “power users” in social media are increasingly important.

Ms. Hammerling, while popping green apple Jolly Ranchers into her mouth, suggests a press tour that includes briefing bloggers at influential geek sites like TechCrunch, All Things Digital and GigaOM.

But Roger McNamee, a prominent tech investor who is backing Wordnik, is also in the room, and a look of exasperation passes across his face at the mere mention of the sites.

“Why shouldn’t we avoid them? They’re cynical,” he says, also noting his concern that Wordnik would probably appeal more to wordsmiths than followers of tech blogs. “That’s where I would be most uncomfortable. They don’t know the difference between ‘they’re’ and ‘there.’ ”

Without missing a beat, Ms. Hammerling changes course, instantly agreeing with Mr. McNamee’s take. “I love you for that,” she intones. “I’ll leave the tech blogs out. Let them come to me.”

Instead, she decides that she will “whisper in the ears” of Silicon Valley’s Who’s Who — the entrepreneurs behind tech’s hottest start-ups, including Jay Adelson, the chief executive of Digg; Biz Stone, co-founder of Twitter; and Jason Calacanis, the founder of Mahalo.

Notably, none are journalists.

This is the new world of promoting start-ups in Silicon Valley, where the lines between journalists and everyone else are blurring and the number of followers a pundit has on Twitter is sometimes viewed as more important than old metrics like the circulation of a newspaper.

Gone are the days when snaring attention for start-ups in the Valley meant mentions in print and on television, or even spotlights on technology Web sites and blogs. Now P.R. gurus court influential voices on the social Web to endorse new companies, Web sites or gadgets — a transformation that analysts and practitioners say is likely to permanently change the role of P.R. in the business world, and particularly in Silicon Valley.

While public relations is just one arrow in the marketing quiver for most companies, it plays an especially crucial role in a region where dozens of start-ups are born each month. Without money for advertising, these unknown companies have to promote themselves to potential users, investors, employees and partners.

“Few tech companies with absolutely no P.R. have built a user base successfully,” said Margit Wennmachers, a co-founder of OutCast Communications, a P.R. agency in San Francisco that opened in 1997. “They need P.R. to put the booster under that rocket ship.”

In the new world of social media, P.R. people must know hundreds of writers, bloggers and Twitter users instead of having six top reporters on speed dial. Ms. Hammerling, the latest example of the omnipresent start-up pitchwoman, is the doyenne of who-you-know P.R.

She arrived in Silicon Valley from the East Coast in 1997, just when the dot-com craze was reaching a crescendo and P.R.’s pivotal role in the start-up world was being cemented. And the evolution of her own tactics has run parallel to the ever-changing marketing forays that make this area a singular hotbed of promotional experimentation.

Dena Cook, Ms. Hammerling’s business partner at Brew Media Relations, recalls the boom years when start-ups sent P.R. firms handsome checks that the firms had to return because they didn’t have room for new clients. For start-ups that did corral a P.R. adviser, it often didn’t matter if they had a solid business; Ms. Cook says a regional newspaper once ran a glowing article about one of her clients the same day the company went out of business.

At the time, tools of the trade were largely limited to press releases and pitch letters, embargoes and exclusives and, of course, the legendary and often criticized parties. Those events included martinis and Champagne, lobster and shrimp, Tori Amos and Aerosmith, all to celebrate companies that had yet to make a cent.

In those days, it took about six months to bring to market a new product or a start-up, Ms. Wennmachers recalls. First came East Coast tours with analysts and monthly publications, followed by visits to weeklies, then dailies.

But the rise of blogs and social networks — and companies’ ability to post information on their own sites — transformed all this. Gradually, deadlines disappeared, as even monthly magazines offered Web sites that published stories by the minute.

Baldwin & Bliss want you to know about this Airline for pets….

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

baltimoresun.com

Baldwin receives nomination for The American Kennel Club Humane Fund Awards for Canine Excellence – ACE 2009

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009
Baldwin brings smiles to a child in the hospital

Baldwin brings smiles to a child in the hospital

I’ll never forget the first time I took Baldwin to County General in Downtown Los Angeles. I dressed him in scrubs for his first visit, complete with a purple stethoscope. He didn’t mind dressing up. I think he sensed he was about to embark on an important mission and that the outfit was just part of the deal.

I was a bit nervous because I had to monitor Baldwin and make sure he remained calm in the new environment with all the smells and sounds of a hospital. I wasn’t at all sure what he would do. But I had my treat bag filled and had taught Baldwin lots of tricks to share with the kids.

I don’t know how, but Baldwin knew exactly what to do from the moment he walked into the oncology ward. We were to visit with a little seven-year old girl named Maria who had just finished a round of chemotherapy treatments. She was alone, waiting for us in the play room in a wrinkled hospital gown, looking gaunt and tired, her pale completion making her seem almost transparent. With a frame so skinny from her treatments, her cheek bones stood out and her eyes looked sunken-in surrounded by thick black circles. Even her pink fluffy slippers looked big. I took note of the IV in her arm because I wanted to make sure Baldwin didn’t bump or dislodge it.

I asked her if she wanted Baldwin to come sit next to her. She shook her head yes. He hopped right up on the couch and immediately laid his entire body across her. At first, I was mortified. What if he hurt her? I didn’t expect him to do that but it was too late. He just did it.

Before I could do anything about it, Maria rubbed under his chin. Then he put his head down and sighed before closing his eyes. Curious, I sat down across from them and watched. Maria began breathing deeply with him, getting more color back with every inhalation. It was a miracle.

Maria gently stroked Baldwin’s fur for the next hour. Her tiny hand moved over his back again and again, much like someone’s fingers praying with rosary beads.

“Hail Mary, Full of Grace, The Lord is With Thee,” I kept repeating while I watched. That’s when I realized I was witnessing Grace in motion.

Here was this high energy dog, a Puli that ran agility courses, herded sheep and could perform all sorts of tricks. He made me throw balls and Frisbees for hours on end. Rarely did he snuggle with me. But there he was in the oncology ward doing exactly what had to be done, exactly what this little girl needed at that moment.

From then on, I took my cues from Baldwin, not the other way around when we went to the hospital. I understood that he was tuned into something far greater than I would ever understand. I was just his facilitator at the end of his leash.


Sign Up for our free monthly Report with reviews of the best Dog Products for your four legged best friend from Baldwin & Bliss!