Thursday, May 22, 2008

Maybelle/Maybel/Maybull the Pit Bull

The night she appeared in our neighborhood, she remained terrified while a neighbor and I kept her constantly in sight and worked to get close to her. She wanted to trust us--wanted to come to us--and would periodically get oh-so-close before panicking and skittering away again. The situation wasn't helped by the fact that she early on moved into the alley that runs behind our house, so every time we'd make some progress with her, a car would appear and scare her off again. Probably 30 minutes into it and one street over, we were able to get a collar and leash on her while she was inhaling a bowl of wet food that Brandi had run home to get. Subsequently getting her down one block, around a corner, and partway down another block to our yard involved our neighbor lifting and carrying her back end while I led her along with the leash, essentially forcing her front two legs to go forward; she had planted her butt firmly on the ground, too terrified to even move, as soon as we'd started trying to lead her with the leash. (We were surprised that she let us move her the way we did--she didn't show even a hint of aggression--but we figured that picking her up might be pushing it and freak her out too much.) She cowered at the back of the yard for a while, as far as she could get from where we sat in the grass, and we let her have that time. We finally coaxed her, gradually, into the basement with another bowl of food, and once inside, she was all over us within minutes--this is a dog who wants and seeks love and affection more than any other dog in this house.

She came to us scarred physically as well as emotionally. Sores and abrasions were scattered across her face and front legs. She had serious infections in both ears. Her left ear flap was swollen like a balloon with a hematoma. She had fleas. She had a hard bump of jutting bone underneath her jaw, indicative of a break. It turned out that she had hookworms. She was too, too thin. And she’d had puppies recently.

That first night was long. There was no way we could bring her in to sleep with us and the other dogs that first night--forget the overwhelming smell and the dirt and the blood drops (from being in heat) and the fleas; we just couldn't take the risk of introducing her to all the dogs that night. She was so scared, it was dark, our dogs were anxious, and we were inside in close quarters. We first tried getting her to sleep in the adjacent dog room (with multiple dog beds and a cozy, blanketed mattress) by herself, but "no freakin' way," said Maybel. Every time we left the room and closed the door, she started howling and crying like someone was beating her. It was horrible. So we had to take shifts sleeping with her. (She even cried and had to be calmed every time just one of us left a room the first couple days.) It was among the worst nights of sleep I've ever had, not only because of the uncomfortable surface on which I was sleeping, but also because a stinky pit bull kept trying to climb on top of me.

We applied Frontline to her back Saturday night. We took her to Pets in the City for a serious flea and odor bath Sunday afternoon and bought her a big bag of food that is helping her gain weight. We went to the vet on Monday. And again on Tuesday and Wednesday. We are scheduled to start her in a training class in early June; Maybel’s training will be free for us because she is a fostered rescue.

When we took her to the veterinary clinic used by a local rescue organization, which is paying for her medical bills, a doctor whom we liked instantly (and who has her own pit bull at home) confirmed for us what we'd suspected--Maybel's jaw had been broken at some point, and she did need surgery for the hematoma. When we came back for Maybel in a few hours, she was bloody not only around her ear (which was drained and which currently has a piece of plastic stitched against it to flatten it) but also around her mouth—the vet had found three broken, infected teeth that needed to be removed too. There was even something (the vet thought it was possibly a piece of wood) jammed up in the root of one of the teeth. My god, broken jaw, broken teeth, nasty ear infections, cuts and scrapes and sores, fleas, hookworms, malnourishment. How miserable and overcome by pain was she for how long? So much pain, so much sorrow, so much fear for an animal who's lived only 1 1/2 to 2 years.

The couple nights following the first were only slightly better. Having her sleep in the same room as everyone else was rough initially (and almost traumatic at one moment), but it's getting better. Bedtime involves just-before-bed interactions outside; two baby gates; and hawk-eye vigilance, a leash, and a spray bottle (she tries to jump up on the bed, which gives her dominant access to the dogs on the other side) until she's settled down in her bed. We're learning, and so is she.

Over the course of her first few days with us, circumstances grew increasingly more complicated, and we feared several times that we were in over our heads and that we absolutely couldn't do this. And truthfully, we are in over our heads. But we're still going to keep trying. Day by day, she's making progress. We've had some setbacks, sometimes frightening ones, but often, those setbacks have been largely the result of mistakes or poor judgment on our part, the result of our doing something the way we're used to doing it without thinking about how it might play out with Maybel, who is still new here and who is still recovering from whatever awful things have happened to her.

But the quickness with which she gifted us with her trust and the affection and sweetness that she displays say something about her resiliency and personality both. This dog will be a wonderful, loving, loyal, long-term pet for someone. She just has some injuries, both physical and emotional, that need to heal.

We are currently working on crate training (we moved furniture between floors so that we could put the crate in the office, where she, Chance, and I are spending most of our time for various reasons, including convenience and the location of the other animals), and though she’s not yet OK with being left in the room alone with the crate’s door latched, she started using the crate almost instantly, without any coaxing or training. The first time I put the bed that she uses both day and night into the crate, she immediately went in. I’ve been teaching her “go to your bed,” and most of the time, she follows the command pretty well. Better yet, several times a day, she crawls into the crate all on her own to nap in her bed. And yesterday, I even got to shower without someone else here to keep Maybel calm. Big stuff. I latched the door and let her watch me walk across the hall into the bathroom, and she was mostly fine. I could hear her whimpering a little bit, but she didn’t bark and howl and cry like she’s been doing when I try to actually leave the house or go downstairs. Progress.

We go back to the veterinary clinic in about two weeks to have the plastic and stitches removed from Maybel’s ear. We go back in about three weeks so that she can be spayed. And then, once she has healed from the spaying, she will be adoptable.

It’s astounding to think that our beagle night was just a month ago. We haven't even recovered from that yet. We've still been thinking about that surviving beagle and looking for information about her every day. But now our hearts and thoughts are full of Maybel too. Barring any catastrophes, even if it takes every ounce of energy and patience and emotional strength we have, we're going to make sure she gets the life and home she deserves. She just wants love. And I don't think that's too much to ask.


P.S. Want to vote on the spelling & pronunciation of her name? ;)

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