Me (tugging on the leash): Come on! Come on!
Dog (looking up): Ok, ok. What’s the hurry?
Me: Aren’t you the one who has to, uh, go?
Dog: Well, sure. But I was smelling deer tracks in this grass, and besides, I thought this was our time.
Me (chagrined): You’re right. I’m sorry, I’m just worried.
Dog: Kids still doing the whole 6–7 thing, huh?
Me: What? No, it’s something about a sea lion now. Anyway, it’s way worse than that. There’s a mad king here in our country threatening genocide, if not world annihilation…
Dog (sniffing grass): Possum, I think…
Me: Hey! Are you even listening?
Dog: Sorry. It’s just that there are things worthy of our attention right here, right now.
Me (rubbing chin thoughtfully): Ah, …
Dog: Even with your limited senses of sight and smell, can’t you find something to spark your joie de vivre?
Me: You speak French?
Dog: That Goldendoodle down the street taught me a little. Take a deep breath.
Me (inhaling loudly, then coughing): P-(hack) po-(wheeze) pollen!
Dog: Try again.
Me: Wow, I hadn’t even noticed that gardenia.
Dog: Yeah, and you can’t smell the half of everything else.
Me: Are you trying to make me feel worse?
Dog: Don’t be a sea lion. I’m just encouraging you to get out of your head and into the world.
Me (looking around): “Eighty percent of everything that is true and beautiful can be experienced on any 10‑minute walk.”
Dog (wagging tail): Whoever said that must be a dog person.
Me: This is the spot where yesterday my daughter picked up a tiny frog.
Dog: Yummy.
Me: Not to eat!
Dog: To each her own.
Me: Well, I’m grateful for you, culinary preferences aside. Thanks for the pep talk.
Dog: The feeling is mutual …. (sniffing grass again) Oh, another deer was right here! You mind if we stop?
Me (breathing deeply again): Take your time.
Andrew Taylor-Troutman is the author of the book with Wipf and Stock Publishers titled This Is the Day: A Year of Observing Unofficial Holidays about Ampersands, Bobbleheads, Buttons, Cousins, Hairball Awareness, Humbugs, Serendipity, Star Wars, Teenagers, Tenderness, Walking to School, Yo-Yos, and More. He lives in Chapel Hill, North Carolina where he is a student of joy.
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Little Big Moments: A Dog-Walking Meditation Chapelboro.com.
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