Saturday, April 25, 2015

Marty Bubble by Guest Blogger Cynthia Niswonger


Neeko & Marty Bubble


The story of this dog and how he came to be such a beloved member of our household did not start in a breeder’s home, or in a pet shop, or even in the dog pound.  It did not start in any of the “usual” ways.  Of that I’m completely convinced.  No.  For us Marty-Bubble’s position of prominence in our lives began at the birth of our second child in 2007. 
Oh, maybe its magical thinking but I have come to believe that just as my son drew his first breath, God placed His fingers to His lips and sent shrill whistle into the universe.  You and I did not hear it; of course, it was the kind of whistle only dogs can hear.  But, I believe whole heartedly that God called Marty-Bubble into our lives right then.  Nicholas’ dog was padding his way to us; though neither the vision of this soft hearted pudgy white dog or the realization of our very real need of him, had yet even begun to emerge into our consciousness.
My son was diagnosed almost three years after his birth with significant special needs.  One of the ways that his disability presented itself, especially in those early years, was that he had a hard time slowing down.  He had a hard time regulating his emotions.  It was difficult for him to connect with people. He had great difficulty balancing sensory input.  He could not speak.  And, in those early years he struggled to show that he understood words spoken to him.  Sometimes he became so overwhelmed by all of the input in his world that he disappeared inside of himself.  He would stand staring out of his bedroom window and flinch when we touched him.  Sometimes we could not reach him at all.
I knew immediately upon his diagnosis that one area he was most at ease, was around animals.  Where we ourselves presented so many challenges for him with so many social rules and sensory assaults to navigate through, our pets drew out freely something wonderful in him.  We at that time had—a Chihuahua, an outdoor cat, and a horse in the yard.  Those four legged creatures seemed to always get tender smiles and care from him.  He was absolutely drawn to them.  I thought of getting him a service dog for a while.
But, there were obstacles and challenges to that.  One of the challenges was the immense cost of having one trained and the travel and expenses involved, both financially and personally.  I wasn’t sure I had it in me to invest in the time and training that it would take to ensure a successful match and a healthy obedient working dog. 
The other heart breaking obstacle was that, for as much as my child loved dogs, something in the way he moved; jerking and flitting and zipping in constant zig zagging bursts of  frenetic motion; and the way he liked to get very close and stare a dog directly in the eye,  was jarring to them. 
My son had been bitten by dogs.  Once he was bitten across the whole of his face by a service dog.  The wound was very minor, but it could have been terrible.  I right then and there began to shelve the idea of looking at a working dog.  He had also been bitten by a few other dogs.  He was nipped at by our Chihuahua and by dogs whose owners were shocked to see their dog bite.  We felt a terrible weight of responsibility for the dogs as well as for our child.
So, with reluctance and a great degree of actual sorrow, I pulled the idea of a service dog---really any dog at all, off of the list.  I whispered up to God and asked Him to send us something someday, in just the right time.  I put aside the idea of dogs.
Of course time moved along.  My son got older and matured.  We spent a lot of time doing therapies. But, by the time he was six years old, it was time for just fun!  So just at the end of nearly three years of intensive in home daily ABA therapy, we came to the end of the EI years and therapy.  That’s when the idea of a dog entered my mind again.  It was in the casual text of our former therapist. 
She asked me if I was still looking for a dog, because her mother in law was giving one up and she thought Marty, the dog might be a really good fit.  I hesitated.  I was reluctant after all of this time.  I replayed all of those bites in my head, and I honestly thought I would say no. 
I asked her what he was like and if she could send a picture of him.  She said “Honestly he’s hard to describe.  He can’t get enough love.  I mean, really! He’s mostly outside in the yard and the other dogs are kind of mean to him.  I like him though, he’s a neat dog.  He’s chunky and kinda goofy looking” and then the picture came through.  I swear if that dog had looked any different at all, I would have said no---
But, there he was in the picture.  He had soft chocolate eyes and a pudgy rounded body---and he looked like a cross between a velveteen plush stuffed beagle and a Jiffy marshmallow.  His eyes stared straight through the camera as if he was looking through the lens and off to God, asking Him if he’d done a good job.
We took Marty in after a trial period.  But, the first time my son screeched joyfully in his ear and buried his face in the fur at the nape of his neck gently tugging fistfuls of bristly soft fur, when Marty seemed to only want to snuggle closer, we knew he would always stay. 
He is named Marty-Bubble because my son could not quite nail down the sound production to say Marty.  When he said it, it came out mom.  So from a list of about six words that my son could say clearly; cookie, car, bubble, purple etc. ---our son chose Bubble.  As the dog was adjusting to the name change, we often tacked them both together---the joyful , playful, utter absurdity of the sound of them together being called down the hallway, well it just stuck.  Marty-Bubble became our dog!
Marty-Bubble goes everywhere my kid goes.  He is a constant goofy companion by his side.  The dog walks him to the bus every day and jumps on board.  He takes up his own bench seat and sits like he’s reporting his work to God again, while the bus driver buckles my son in.  Then he pads gently off of the bus and walks back home with me. 
He goes to my son’s school sometimes and very gently lies down as a circle gathers around him.  He allows the sticky grasping sweet and fragile hands of all of the children, each with varying degrees of significant special needs to pat across his fur.  He lays there like gooey warmed over marshmallow whip in a classroom that is like the United Nations of disabilities, every one of them is represented---and every child gets to stroke and tug through his fur. His tail thumps and his eyes are far off, focused on God again.
Marty-Bubble is a white shadow dog now.  I am still very careful about them not being unsupervised together.  Though, he’s never once shown an ounce of aggression, he’s never even walked away from my son.  He stays by his side, no matter what.  I teach my child through the love of this humble looking dog about his personal responsibility to be gentle and kind and to take care of another living soul, and to do it with great pride. 
And, Marty-Bubble gives it right back in every way that he can.  One of the sweetest things I’ve ever seen is when the dog thinks my son is being reprimanded harshly, he will pad softly up and physically lay his body across my child and stare at me with soft eyes---as if to say “Hey, hey---we can work this out, let’s just talk about it…” and it always makes me grin.
Every night for a few minutes Marty-Bubble climbs up into bed with my son and stretches his warm protective and peaceful body full length out against his side.  His presence there signals that it is time to relax.  I know when my son has come to rest; I’ll hear a tumble thump as the dog jumps from his bed and pads down the hall to his own soft sided always open crate.  I know then that all is well in my son’s world.
In the end it always comes back to the simple gifts a dog brings.  We are so grateful to God for calling Marty-Bubble into our lives and for all of the immeasurable and impossible to articulate zillion and one little moments of happiness that he brings into our lives.  Of course everyone knows that boys need dogs.  But, our little boy needed one even more.
I think though, that it was a recent moment that had the most profound effect on me personally that encapsulated the gift of our dog.  During my son's life we have done years of therapy.  We did years and years of neurology, one of my kid’s issues was seizure disorder.  Recently his scans came back clean and he’s been seizure free for over two years!  We were discharged officially from service in neurology, except for an annual visit each year.

As we concluded this last visit I looked up suddenly feeling a little lick of something akin to panic for a moment  …”Wait! What do we do next?  I mean where do we go from here?” I asked.  The neurologist smiled gently and said “You go play. Go have fun! Enjoy this; things don’t always last---but right now, you’re in a good place.  Just go have fun."  Then she paused and said almost abashedly--- "Though, therapeutically speaking I would suggest, well---I mean, does he have a dog?” My relief was sudden and sweeping as I felt the width of my smile almost split my face from ear to ear.
And so there you go. Degrees.  DSM’s. Medicine. Therapies.  Even with all of that knowledge in a icy cool clinical scientific world, even the experts know---there’s magic in dogs.  
When Marty-Bubble is at my kid’s side, he becomes the physical embodiment of one thing we’ve been able to provide, that is unquestionably right. Yes, there’s magic in all dogs.  But, there’s more than that in some dogs.  There’s a direct gateway to heaven in the eyes of some dogs. This is the story of one such dog--our dog.  Our silly wonderful Marty-Bubble.   



Cynthia Niswonger is a stay at home mother in San Diego California. She is an active voice and advocate in the autism community. She is an animal lover and a nature seeker. She is a part time writer and a poet.  She shares her unique views and experiences openly through her writing.  

Monday, March 9, 2015

TECO The Costco Christmas Miracle

     If you believe in miracles, Teco's story will come as no surprise to you. If you have ever doubted that God is watching over us, including all the loveable, four-legged, furry children, then here's the confirmation you need to push past that doubt.
     With the adoption of my last rescue dog, I came across an extraordinary group of women at Dog Rescue Without Borders who have devoted their lives to locating dogs in crisis in Tijuana, Mexico then  providing foster care and eventual homes for these loveable, grateful souls.
     Part of the process includes dog transport to another area, or even another country. Most of the Dog Rescue Without Borders discovery dogs are transported to the United States for medical care and foster placement until forever families can be found. Other times, dogs will be transferred to other counties for placement at sister agencies.
The heart it requires to care for, provide love, shelter, food and security by fostering these animals, is a concept I cannot begin to wrap my head around. Imagine the responsibility it requires to ensure your charge is safe during this stressful process. Further still, imagine the bond formed between the rescuer, foster mom and the animal.
Once bonded, the dogs move on to other families, and you open your home again and again and repeat the process, one after the other, never running out of love, patience and loyalty. I envision a gaping hole in the heart of these Saints who tirelessly repeat this process on a consistent basis.
Can you imagine???
     Cynthia Espana Palacio is one such hero. Teco, one of Cynthia's beloved rescue &  foster dogs, was part of a transfer with 6 other dogs from Tijuana, Mexico to Riverside, California on December 4th 2014, when 3-year old Teco wiggled out of his collar. The paid transporter, Mario, didn't notify Cynthia of Teco's disappearance until the next day and told her that Teco ran off on Beyer Boulevard in San Ysidro - one of the busiest streets in the enormous port-of-entry city!
     The entire dog rescue community went a-buzz with action. Flyers were posted all over the area, and social media lit up with concern for poor, lost Teco. Volunteers lined the streets looking for Teco.
 Donde Esta Teco???
 To make matters worse, it was winter and bad weather had set in. Temperatures were freezing, and rain poured, hampering rescue efforts.
     Everyone feared the worst for Teco. His survival, lost and alone in a strange country in foul weather didn't bode well for him. Cynthia, who had formed a very strong attachment to Teco, was so distraught over his disappearance she was taken to the emergency room showing signs of a nervous breakdown. How could this happen???
     Days pass, and there was no sign of Teco anywhere! The transporter Mario, was peppered with questions and inconsistencies began to arise in his story. Cynthia and others in the rescue community concluded after several days, that Teco did not go missing in San Ysidro, the United States, but in Tijuana, Mexico. This detail was of great importance because valuable time and energy had been lost looking for Teco in the wrong country!
The search shifted to Tijuana and posters in Spanish went up everywhere. Shelters were searched, streets scoured, but no sign of Teco.
     Christmas loomed just around the corner and it seemed the Holiday must go on despite Teco's disappearance. Cynthia couldn't shake the thought of her poor lost baby, and never gave up hope. Although the Christmas spirit was far from her mind, she robotically went through the motions of  Holiday preparation.
     Cynthia drove to Costco in Tijuana to purchase her Christmas tree and asked a Costco employee to put the decorative white snow on it. The employee agreed to do it, but explained it would take some time. Instead of waiting around, allowing the visions of a Teco-less Christmas to invade her thoughts, she, being a woman of great faith, went instead to a local church. While there, she lit a candle for Teco and cried out to God, praying to the Virgin of Guadalupe for mercy and protection over Teco, begging in earnest to please bring her sweet Teco home.
     Now here's where the story takes a suspicious turn, where many readers might stop reading and say to themselves "no way did this happen'', but it's true, I tell you with tears streaming down my face, it really is true!
     Cynthia returned to Costco to pick up her Christmas tree and sitting beside the very tree she had bought, paid for and had decorated with snow, was TECO! It's as if he was placed directly beneath that exact tree at the precise time she would return as if to say " I'm home, Mama, I am home."
Teco Before 
She proceeded to scream and shout "Gloria a Dios" and didn't care about the glances the other shoppers were giving her, she was just happy her Teco was found. Teco was a lot skinnier, hungry, dehydrated and full of cuts, most likely a result of a dog-fight. She took him home to bathe him, dress his wounds and make him a very special dinner.
Teco's been recuperating at Cynthia's ever since, and has been patiently awaiting a forever family to adopt him.
 Of course Cynthia would love nothing more than to keep him, but part of being a phenomenal rescuer and foster mom is the ability to release the dogs to awaiting families, so more lives can be saved.
Teco Now
Teco is such a great dog, if I didn't have a full house myself, I would adopt him in a minute and name him Costco.
He's 3 years old, weighs about 62 pounds, has medium energy level and is great with other dogs and cats. He's loyal, social and would be so incredibly grateful if you could take him home with you.
If you are interested in completing Teco's story, please contact Dog Rescue Without Borders at info@drwb.org

Take Me Home

Cynthia & Teco


Sunday, January 4, 2015

Love, It Seemed, Just Wasn't Enough.

     When my husband Scott and I married, we decided not to have children. Instead we chose to have a puppy. Scott knew a young Labrador retriever would be the ideal pet for us. He was confident about our decision, so I, a never-before dog owner, quietly stood by, allowing him to take the  lead. I never would've admitted, but, as insecure as it sounds, I just hoped that whatever dog we chose, I would love it, and it would love me back.

 
     During our search, Scott saw a FOUND DOG notice featuring a black lab puppy a rancher had posted on the wall at our local animal hospital. Calling to inquire if anyone had come forward yet to claim the dog, he was told to come by, if interested, could take him, as no one had responded to the flyers. The rancher believed the dog had been tossed from a car traveling near his property.
     Upon arriving, the dog bounded up to Scott and peed on his shoe. That's when my husband knew --- he was the one.
    We named him CODY, and fell deeply in love.  He was such a little thing, but sure could pee a lot, and definitely was not potty-trained. The neighbors next door, were foster parents of three brown labs, so CODY instantly had friends to bark along with.
     Right away, we took him to the vet to have him examined, micro chipped, and neutered. The doctor determined he was about four months old. Scott and I picked a day to be CODYS forever birthday, February 4th. 
     Soon after, at the vet for a follow-up, we mentioned to the doctor that his nose was only getting wet on one side, while the other was dry and sensitive. After examining CODY, the doctor determined his left ear canal was blocked, and  he was unable to get a scope in it. Concerned, he ordered a cat-scan. The results were devastating: CODY had a large mass in his brain, near his ear, that required surgery.
     Within a week or two, CODY began experiencing pain requiring medication every few hours. Each evening, I made peanut butter sandwich squares to feed him throughout the night, tucking the pain medicine inside. I would lie with him in his bed, holding and comforting him the best I could, praying for a miracle.
     Poor as we were, we didn't even have the money to pay for the cat-scan, much less the brain surgery. We were told our CODY would die without it. He had a major infection that grew into a mass affecting the entire left ear, including the canal, causing it to have to be removed, and the outer ear sewn shut. The surgery was dangerous -- he would lose his hearing in one ear, but the operation could save his life.
     We sought a second opinion, and a third, and interviewed a few surgeons. The first didn't even make eye contact with CODY or touch him. Unimpressed, we left.
     Each day, CODY yelped a little more, his jaw beginning to slack, and we knew time was running out. Many advised us to put him down, but he was "Our Boy", and we could never give up on him. We felt that someone else had already given up on him, and dumped him out in the country. When we chose to rescue CODY, that rescue meant through good times and bad. He needed us now more than ever. We simply refused to quit!
     I began searching  online day and night, applying for grants to find some organization to help us with his operation. Every day our hearts swelled with love for our CODY.  We felt so helpless. All we had to give this dog was love. Love, it seemed  in this case, just wasn't  enough.
      We received a portion of the money through a grant from Labrador Lifeline, the rest through a private organization in the form of a loan. These life-saving blessings provided the miracle we had been hoping for.

Cody & Tortellini
Three Years
   The surgery center we chose oohed  and awed over  our puppy, and took such great care of him.



 He came through the surgery with flying colors! The doctor did such a great job sewing his ear shut, you can barely tell there was ever anything wrong with him. Both sides of his jowls remain slack, and his nose still doesn't get wet,  but his painful ordeal is all behind him now. CODY has exceptional hearing in his good ear.
He is our champion.
      From the very beginning, CODY  has always been a terrific dog.  He seems grateful, like we are, just to have each other in our lives. He's  super good-looking, very personable, gentle, patient, and loving. He's a fantastic guard dog, loyal friend and comforter. Our big baby hasn't missed a meal yet, and  never passes up a good carne asada burrito. He currently weighs 110 pounds, so we limit his Mexican food consumption. We refer to CODY as "The World's Greatest Dog". He has become family. We like to say that CODY rescued us because our lives are forever changed for the better. We love you, CODY! Thank you for loving me back.

Cody with Mom & Dad