Lost Souls: Found! Inspiring Stories about Golden Retrievers
By Kyla Duffy
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About this ebook
Golden Retrievers love balls, swimming, and make great therapy pets. But did you know that some also hunt for Easter Eggs? Lost Souls: FOUND! Inspiring Stories About Golden Retrievers is a heartwarming, thought-provoking compilation of true stories that answer questions like "What is dog rescue?" and "Do all adopted dogs come with baggage?" It addresses the cruelty of animal neglect and abuse, and the joy that rescued dogs bring to their new homes. This book is a must-read for Golden Retriever lovers and for people who are considering adopting dogs. A PORTION OF PROCEEDS FROM EVERY SALE IS DONATED BACK TO GOLDEN RETRIEVER RESCUE GROUPS.
Excerpt: "As I stepped through the door and onto the cold concrete floor, I was practically bowled over by a huge Golden, barreling towards me at full-speed! As he humped my leg and chewed on my forearm I looked around the sterile room, bare except for a dog crate, food bowl, and water bowl. Through the sliding glass doors I could see that the Scotties had a wonderful yard to play in, so why was this Golden stuck in the basement like this? There was no way I was leaving him there." -Shereen Raucci, regarding Pierce
Kyla Duffy
Happy Tails Books is driven by a passion to help needy animals by raising awareness about adoption and the proper care of domestic dogs and cats. We are grateful to our volunteer photographers and editors who help us make these books come to life. Happy Tails Books donates up to 25% of gross profits back to rescue organizations. Any rescue enrolled in our rescue partner program is eligible for a donation from each sale made through this website. You can indicate your favorite rescue on the check-out form when you make a purchase. Since 2009, Happy Tails Books has published more than 1,000 stories from people who have fostered and/or adopted dogs and cats! Co-editors Kyla Duffy and Lowrey Mumford are dog lovers who have been publishing the Lost Souls: FOUND! series since 2009. Lowrey knows journalism, and Kyla has experience in entrepreneurship; this has created the perfect synergy for the Happy Tails Books project. Lowrey and Kyla have two adopted dogs each, and they continue to support the rescues in their communities.
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Lost Souls - Kyla Duffy
Introduction: Answering the Call
It was very early on the morning of my second wedding anniversary, so I didn’t answer the phone when it rang. I wanted to sleep in with my hubby. When I finally checked voicemail, it was the president of the rescue group I foster for. The message simply said, They found Bill. Call me.
I should have answered the call.
Bill was my two-year-old train wreck of a foster, who I had only for an hour before he and another little girl I was fostering escaped from my yard. Well-socialized to people, the girl was found and returned immediately, but we were afraid Bill was gone for good. Terrified of people and completely unsocialized from spending his life in a cage at a puppy mill, we knew he would try to get as far away from humans as possible. Three weeks passed, and I feared the coyotes had caught him, so the call that morning was shocking, to say the least. It was also ambiguous. Was he found alive? Dead? Where was he?
Joggers saw Bill in the woods about a quarter of a mile from my home, splayed out on a trail, trying to eat a carcass. They alerted animal control, who took him to our local Humane Society. His microchip was scanned, and he was subsequently reunited with our group.
Bill’s future was uncertain. His three-week ordeal left him with a gash on his leg so deep that his muscle was exposed, and he was down to 13 lbs. from 21, leaving his every bone protruding. He just sat, unresponsive, no light in his eyes. His mood seemed similar to when I first got him, but physically he was much worse. Needless to say, I was overwhelmed with remorse, but also driven to help him however I could, no matter what it would take.
For a month I took him to the vet every other day to get his bandages changed. For three months, my husband and I hoped that he would start to move. Bill was so scared; he just sat in his bed and cowered. We carried him outside to potty, and then he would dart back to his bed. For a while we thought he would do best as a companion for a shut-in who did not have much activity in his or her home. However, after a time, Bill finally started to come around, and we decided that the best place for him was right here in our home.
With training (by my husband and me, and by the dogs at the dog park), Bill started to gain confidence and understanding. He realized that we are here to love him, and that he is supposed to play and enjoy life. We’ve discovered that he loves hiking and romping through fields with other dogs, so we get him his own
dog to foster as often as possible. Sometimes he’s the big brother, and other times the fosters mentor him. Either way, it’s always a great experience for us all.
Working with rescue groups (especially after Bill’s fiasco) has given me much to reflect on. I cringe when I think about my best friend Bill’s life at the puppy mill and lost in the woods. For a while, I felt completely helpless when considering the millions of other dogs also living without love, shelter, or proper medical care. Then one day in my heart I heard the call,
and I wasn’t going to miss it again. I realized that feeling helpless was not going to save lives. However, publishing books full of stories about wonderful adopted dogs, and the positive impact they have had on their families, just might. This is how the Lost Souls: FOUND!
book series was born.
If you read carefully, you’ll surely laugh, cry, and learn from these amazing stories submitted by fosters and forever families, just as my co-editor Lowrey and I did when we edited them. I hope they will reinforce the belief that rescued dogs are exceptional dogs and are certainly worth the effort.
When you’re finished reading, ask yourself if you’ve heard the call to support rescue. Volunteering, donating, or just sharing information are all valuable ways to help.
If you hear the call, don’t let it go to voicemail. Pick up the phone
and save a life. -Kyla Duffy, Editor
Inspiring Stories About Golden Retrievers
Give me your dog tired, your dog-eared,
Your huddled masses yearning to go home again,
The wretched refuse of the dog-eat-dog world.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!
By Stephen Guy
More Interesting than Shoes
The key,
she said softly, is to be more interesting than whatever he’s looking at.
It was 9:00 a.m., and I was crouched on the floor of my local PETCO® with the trainer, and a statue that had moments earlier been a four-year-old Golden Retriever named Eli. We were at an obedience class where we had been working on loose leash walking,
and he’d been doing quite well, actually. At least he had been until he saw the ferrets. Despite my best efforts, for ten minutes after Eli first laid eyes on them, he stood completely still, not blinking, totally impervious to my gentle nudges, my excited calls, my offers of a treat. Nothing would break his gaze. The trainer remarked that in all her years she’d never seen a dog quite like Eli.
Nor, for that matter, had I. My family and I were lucky enough to have three Goldens, even before I got Eli during my first year of law school. While all of them had displayed a love
of nature, if you will, none came close to Eli.
Instead of playing ball or swimming, Eli prefers sitting at the window of my apartment for hours on end, watching the birds and the squirrels. Rather than playing with the dogs at my girlfriend’s house, he chooses to sit at the porch door and scan her backyard. At my parents’ house he spends half of his time outside, lying and watching the animals. Long periods of calm are punctuated by sudden bursts of energy, where he runs across the yard at full speed, trying to catch one that strayed too far afield. The other half of his time is spent sitting in front of my parents’ birdcage, drooling all over himself and occasionally looking up at me, wondering when I will open the cage and let him do his job.
Looking back, Toby (Eli’s name, at the time) was more than hesitant the first time I met him, and I don’t think I could have imagined then that he would grow into the dog I today know and love as Eli. As much as Eli’s not a normal
Golden Retriever, having him has brought order to my mildly chaotic life. Gone are the days of sleeping until two in the afternoon and staying at the library to study for 14 hours straight. Gone is the freedom to leave food lying around at dog-on-his-hind-legs-height or to just stay inside all day when it is cold or snowy.
But also gone is the feeling of coming home to an empty apartment. Gone is waking up and having no one to greet me. I suddenly have my very own, foolproof, smile machine, which can cheer me up no matter how down I may feel. There’s nothing like laughing at him rolling around on the floor while attacking a stuffed goose or taking him on a good, long walk. There are few things in this world which can brighten your world like a happy dog, and Eli’s endless energy and constant enthusiasm lighten whatever load the day may have built up on my shoulders.
No matter Eli’s current distraction, he never lets me forget he is around. He slides around on the hardwood floor