Dog Trainer or Victim

Unusual day today.  To give you some context for what happened, check out this short (8 sec) video clip from yesterday:

I'm working on Raika's "drive with control".  The training scenario is....get dog riled up, wait for her shut up (can be a very long wait), then send for dumbbell.  Because Raika particularly enjoys pounding into me on the return, I allowed some of that to release her frustration.  Note that I was wearing nylon pants; normally I would wear jeans when doing this kind of work.   When I got dressed yesterday, I wasn't thinking about the kind of training I would be doing.  And therein lies the root of the problem.

Fast forward 24 hours.  Today I had my "women's wellness" exam with a nurse practitioner.

All started out perfectly normal.  I got a nice, cheerful nurse practitioner who takes her job seriously - and one of her primary jobs is to distract me with cheerful talk while she does Things Down There.  She started by asking what I do for a living.

I train dogs.

Ah! An excellent opening.  What exactly do I train them for?

Obedience.

Wow; that's wonderful!  That led to a nice little dialogue about how much she appreciates a well trained dog.  And being allergic to dogs, she particularly likes dogs that don't jump up, because she's sufficiently allergic that she'll have to change her clothes.  Since our total visit time will be about ten minutes at the most, I feel no need to enlighten her as to exactly what kind of obedience training I actually do.

And then she goes silent.  Very silent. After a few seconds, she asks me about the scratches and bruises on my thighs.  The bruises on my stomach.

Ah, awkward moment.  I have led her to believe that I, too, value a well trained dog that does not jump on people.  I didn't' actually say that, but I also did not correct her assumptions.

"Well.....those are from my dog."

There are different kinds of silence.  The one that ensued was the "I don't believe you" kind.

She approached if from a different direction.

"Gosh, I'm really concerned about this.  You have some pretty significant injuries here....I'm worried for you."

Shit shit shit.

Before they go to my house and arrest my husband, I start talking.  Sometimes I talk too much, and sometimes not enough.  In this case, I didn't really know what to do, but I sure as hell didn't want her calling in the Domestic Violence Crisis Committee.

I explained exactly what I had been doing which caused the scratches and bruises.

"I want my dog to have a faster return while she is holding an object, so I get her as excited as I can, send her to get an object, and then have her run at me full speed.  She then leaps into my stomach or wraps her legs around my legs.  That is what causes the bruises - her toes.  The scratches were caused by her dew claws digging in to my legs so she could hold on better.  There are multiple bruises and scratches because we did this multiple times"

I'll admit that even as the words were coming out, I knew they didn't sound too good.  Obedience trainer, my ass.

They let me go home.  I wonder what it says on my chart.  I wonder if I'm going to get a follow up phone call.  To be honest, I think it's pretty likely.

57 comments

gretchencaldwell

I was trying to explain a bruise on the side of my boob (frisbee carried in armpit, dog tries to steal it…..), and I couldn’t remember where it had come from, so I just said “I don’t know”……at which point the NP left, and then an entire brigade of people came back in. Teh questions started, and as I looked down at my arm, with more bruises…………“OH!!! I have a really high drive bitch at home, she did that yesterday.” DEAD silence in the room. Um. Thankfully the NP had a SchH lined Bouvier and quickly caught on to what I was saying, and the interrogation ended. :)

Kathy

ROTFLMAO

Peggy

I had the same thing happen to me during my visit to the OB/GYN and I had a heck of a time trying to explain where all the bruises came from. It’s funny to think about now, but it was scary at the time.

Mary Severson

Horrors! Well, if necessary you can always give them a Raika demo.

Laurie Graichen

OMG, that was the best laugh I’ve had in a long time. Thanks for sharing. Have to admit that “bruises in strange places” isn’t something I think about before going in for my “yearly”. When I was trialling Bravo in agility he was very likely to bite at the end of a run. In a place where women would prefer not to be bitten. Multple runs meant multiple potential bites. Glad my mammograms were always in the summer, during our agility trial break. Just saying……..

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