Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The enormous stress of two kids remote learning and two full time high stress WFH jobs
Lame. You are weak and broken - don’t blame it on the poor dog.
OP here - Lol, I am weak and broken for being stressed out like the rest of the world?? I always forget how many crazies there are on this site. Strangely I feel better now so thank you. I’ll be signing off now until I forget again about the general lunacy rate on DCUM. Good luck everyone!
OP, DO NOT FEEL BAD about not loving the situation!!
Our neighbor got a puppy some 3 years back, obviously surrendering to his son's pleas. The boy proudly paraded the dog around the school bus stop.. for maybe 3 times. Then the dog disappeared. When asked, the neighbor said that his wife said "I'm not walking this dog", he had to travel on business a lot, and the kid who got them in the dog mess in the first place, lost interest and could not be trusted at all times to take care of the animal.
They returned the dog to the woman they took the dog from; the neighbor said she was less than happy, but oh well.
OP, is there any way for you to return the dog?
No, she needs to step up and make some attempt at being a decent human. It's not about the dog. There are definitely some other things needing addressing.
Except it is about the dog!
She doesn’t want to walk the dog 3 times a day. She doesn’t want to groom the dog. She doesn’t want to train the dog. She doesn’t want to feed the dog. Etc. Her husband and kids aren’t taking care of the dog and she doesn’t want to do it.
She needs to re-home the dog.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The enormous stress of two kids remote learning and two full time high stress WFH jobs
Lame. You are weak and broken - don’t blame it on the poor dog.
OP here - Lol, I am weak and broken for being stressed out like the rest of the world?? I always forget how many crazies there are on this site. Strangely I feel better now so thank you. I’ll be signing off now until I forget again about the general lunacy rate on DCUM. Good luck everyone!
OP, DO NOT FEEL BAD about not loving the situation!!
Our neighbor got a puppy some 3 years back, obviously surrendering to his son's pleas. The boy proudly paraded the dog around the school bus stop.. for maybe 3 times. Then the dog disappeared. When asked, the neighbor said that his wife said "I'm not walking this dog", he had to travel on business a lot, and the kid who got them in the dog mess in the first place, lost interest and could not be trusted at all times to take care of the animal.
They returned the dog to the woman they took the dog from; the neighbor said she was less than happy, but oh well.
OP, is there any way for you to return the dog?
No, she needs to step up and make some attempt at being a decent human. It's not about the dog. There are definitely some other things needing addressing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The enormous stress of two kids remote learning and two full time high stress WFH jobs
Lame. You are weak and broken - don’t blame it on the poor dog.
OP here - Lol, I am weak and broken for being stressed out like the rest of the world?? I always forget how many crazies there are on this site. Strangely I feel better now so thank you. I’ll be signing off now until I forget again about the general lunacy rate on DCUM. Good luck everyone!
OP, DO NOT FEEL BAD about not loving the situation!!
Our neighbor got a puppy some 3 years back, obviously surrendering to his son's pleas. The boy proudly paraded the dog around the school bus stop.. for maybe 3 times. Then the dog disappeared. When asked, the neighbor said that his wife said "I'm not walking this dog", he had to travel on business a lot, and the kid who got them in the dog mess in the first place, lost interest and could not be trusted at all times to take care of the animal.
They returned the dog to the woman they took the dog from; the neighbor said she was less than happy, but oh well.
OP, is there any way for you to return the dog?
No, she needs to step up and make some attempt at being a decent human. It's not about the dog. There are definitely some other things needing addressing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The enormous stress of two kids remote learning and two full time high stress WFH jobs
Lame. You are weak and broken - don’t blame it on the poor dog.
OP here - Lol, I am weak and broken for being stressed out like the rest of the world?? I always forget how many crazies there are on this site. Strangely I feel better now so thank you. I’ll be signing off now until I forget again about the general lunacy rate on DCUM. Good luck everyone!
OP, DO NOT FEEL BAD about not loving the situation!!
Our neighbor got a puppy some 3 years back, obviously surrendering to his son's pleas. The boy proudly paraded the dog around the school bus stop.. for maybe 3 times. Then the dog disappeared. When asked, the neighbor said that his wife said "I'm not walking this dog", he had to travel on business a lot, and the kid who got them in the dog mess in the first place, lost interest and could not be trusted at all times to take care of the animal.
They returned the dog to the woman they took the dog from; the neighbor said she was less than happy, but oh well.
OP, is there any way for you to return the dog?
Anonymous wrote:OP, is the dog a puppy? Puppies are REALLY hard, and our beloved dog almost broke me mentally when he was a puppy, but it does get better.
That said, as should be clear from all of the other responses by now, you do have a husband problem. When the kids go to bed one night, have a serious heart to heart with him. The dog NEEDS to be trained. The dog NEEDS to be fed, walked, groomed. Ask him: is he going to step up, or does he agree with you that this may have been a mistake?
Anonymous wrote:Throw money at the problem. Send the dog to one of those training facilities. It’ll come back to you a different, more obedient dog.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with the OP. Same thing happened to me and I'd get rid of the dog in an instant. So much work for very little reward. I don't get this whole dog culture - constantly cleaning up poop, wondering what the dog is chewing on or having him sit there in his cage. The house is much dirtier with a dog. The only thing stopping me from getting rid of him is this dog culture peer pressure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The people suggesting chore charts etc are nuts...kids and husband don’t give a crap so a chore chart is just going to cause fights.
OP, the advice I always give is that the responsibility of the dog always falls on mom. So, getting a dog is mom’s and only mom’s choice.
Now you need to decide what to do: 1) take dog back to where you got it 2) dig in and love the dog and take full responsibility yourself.
I'd do the chore chart because it allows them to take ownership of and responsibility for what seems inevitable, which is returning or rehoming the dog. Give them a month. When they all fail to take care of the dog, because what they wanted was the fun and not the work, then the dog goes back and it's their fault, not yours. I'd be clear: "I didn't want a dog. You all assured me that you would take care of the dog, but you aren't doing that. The dog needs to be trained, fed, brushed, and taken outside X times a day. Here is a chart listing all the things that need to be done. If they are not, the dog goes back. I'm simply not going to do all the work; it's not fair. If you want a dog, you need to take care of it. At the end of the day, I will do all the chores you have not done. If, at the end of the month, I have done more than X chores, the dog is going back." At the end, you look at the chart and see who actually did what. If you have done more chores than whatever limit you set at the beginning of the month, the dog goes back. Done.
Anonymous wrote:Family meeting which can be a teaching moment for the kids (and your DH) about how you all made the choice to get a dog and you all need to participate in training the dogs. Kids can teach lessons like "sit" which are easy and stepping stones for the dog to understand that he/she needs to listen and gets a reward for doing so. DH can work on more complex tasks (stay--which requires more work). Find a few good youtube videos on training. I'd put effort into getting the family to work together before thinking about getting rid of the dog. My .02