Welcome To My Whack-A-Mole World
Some days owning my own business, even this business that I dearly love, feels like living in a “Whack-A-Mole” game. Every time I pop my head up, somebody whacks it with a gigantic puffy mallet. In addition to a variety of memorable, wonderfully quirky clients I meet, what makes this business so interesting, is the endless parade of comical, unbelievably whacky situations in which I find myself.
Dog training can be a dangerous endeavor, but not necessarily in the way you might think. Sure, there’s the occasional resentful Rhodesian Ridgeback, vengeful Vizsla or the displeased Dachshund, but it’s the hidden dangers that will bite you in the backside when you least expect it. I once sustained a critical thumbnail injury in a bazaar clicker-training incident. No dog was present; I simply couldn’t contain my excitement over learning a new training technique. Thus, using unnecessary force with the clicker, I nearly dislocated my thumb.
Danger lurks around every corner and behind every door. During a session with Buddy, the overly exuberant boxer, I sustained a rather nasty blow to the face. It was not a left hook delivered by said boxer, but a direct hit from the door. In his excitement over my arrival, the dog pushed it open with his paws where I happened to be standing in the line of fire.
Training Chester, the English Mastiff to voluntarily enter the bathtub was quite the risky endeavor. Because it was no small feat to lift Chester’s 160-pound frame into the tub (not to mention it was 160-pounds of mastiff that did not want to get into the tub) we decided that luring Chester to the destination with raw chicken livers would be worth a shot. My plan was eventually successful, but I never thought I’d know the perils of a bathtub smeared with bits of slippery liver and chicken blood; the mere sight of which had nothing over the shower scene from Psycho.
Just before Halloween this past year, I accepted a client in need of behavior modification for a dog that was showing aggression toward people. The dog had a bite history, having aggressed toward several people. Now, working with aggressive dogs, especially dogs that have used their teeth on people, is a dicey prospect on several levels. Going into these cases, I dread to think about whether I can cover my health insurance deductible or the possibility of having to conduct training sessions while wearing a body cast.
I drove up to the client’s house at the appointed time, noticing how the home was abundantly decorated for Halloween. Then, to my extreme horror, I noticed what appeared to be tracks of dried blood running down the driveway. Now, had this call been to help potty train a 10-week-old toy poodle, my reaction would have been very different. But, because I’d been summoned to work with a biting dog, my first thought at the sight of the bloody massacre, was to turn my Ford Focus 180 degrees and head for the nearest job fair seeking an immediate career change.
As I age, in the “Whack-A-Mole” life that I’m living, I now see the value of buying the big bottle of ibuprofen at Costco and keeping my therapist’s number on speed dial. Nevertheless, it’s all worth it when at the end of the day, a grateful client presents me with a thank you gift and then says, “Thanks. This is for keeping Boomer off of E-Bay!”
Author’s Note: These are all true stories. The names of the dogs have been changed in order to prevent the need for them to enter The Wet Nose Protection Program.









