Living with senior dogs is a vast array of clunky chaos.


You might wake up one day in a puddle of piddle. Or you might avoid the piddle that day but wake in a panic running for the dog nose-shaped inhaler; where on dogs earth did you put it?

Days With Senior Dogs

Trips to the vet’s cost not only hard cash when you live with old dogs, but they also cost your state of mind and heart. You go through the highest and lowest emotions in a single vet trip. You never really know whether this is the time you’re getting the bad news. Is it operable, or is it just a fatty mass? Do the teeth need pulling? How’s the heart sounding?


Stairs to the sofa are purchased. Steps to the bed bought and installed. House moves are made – old dogs are better off in bungalows, don’t you know?


Floors become patchworked with rugs to save little old legs from trips and sprains. Food is served at different heights, as is water, as is love.

Home becomes rest home, becomes nursing home, becomes hospice. Routines become rigid and can’t change because confusion grows in change, and old dogs get confused; often, they do.



One thing about old dogs is this. They were not always old; they were young, free, busy and bold. 


The dogs were bouncy, speedy, jumpy and keen. Younger bodies are kinder to those who wear them. 


Years pass by fast when you live with dogs. Puppyhood flies past in the blink of an eye, and suddenly, the brown turns to grey. The nimble legs become stiff, and the pools of those eyes become foggy and blue.


We have a lifetime of love with a dog, you see. Whether they join you at six weeks or six years, if we allow them to, they teach us. 


If we don’t learn from our dogs, we’re doing life wrong. That’s what they’re here for to teach us to love and live and learn. That’s why their lives are so short, and it serves to remind us of our own limited time.


My old dog taught me so much, so very much. Chips is his name. 


Chips taught me what dogs need from people. He showed me all my crunchy sides. He opened my heart right up to share that with the world. 

Chips - Sensitive Senior


So, I shared it and continue to share it. The lesson of Chips. The lesson that makes dog lives better everywhere.


I knew he wasn't going to be around forever. 


He got to sixteen. He had stairs for the sofa and steps for the bed. 


One day Chips had a wild walk and I though he was going to live forever, he outran all the others, backwards and forwards, happy and smiling all over his beautiful face. 

Two days after that walk he left. 


He just didn't want to get up that day, so he didn't. We helped him along at the end, at home with a wonderful vet. 


And as he sleeps in my heart, I’ll stay grateful that we ever crossed paths at all.

The Dog Who Wrote a Bestseller!



Chips struggled with life in general. His struggles inspired my first and bestselling book Inspiring Resilience in Fearful and Reactive Dogs.


Chips lived completely, fully and enthusiastically right up to the moment he died.


So who better to be the face of my book The Senior Dog Wellness Guide?

 

About the Author.


Sally Gutteridge is a writer, publisher, qualified canine behaviourist, and trauma-informed coach. A passionate advocate for ethical dog care, she draws on a background in military dog training, rescue rehabilitation, and assistance dog work. Combining compassion with science, Sally helps both dogs and their people build trust, safety, and resilience one gentle step at a time.