I’ve recently realized that I love the smell of dogs. Not the musty, stale and dirty pet smell, but the real smell. There’s a difference in odors, and I think it’s based on lifestyle. Your grandmothers Pomeranian has a specific smell that it developed as a result of hours indoors. A lifetime spent sleeping under the dining room table and being stroked by old, leathery hands is bound to engender a certain scent. This is certainly not pleasant, and not what I’m talking about.
To smell like a dog the animal has to have a little freedom. They have to be allowed to roll in dirt, run through sprinklers, and chase the wind. They have to be allowed to eat sticks, and wrestle, and dig in mud. When this dog comes to you, not because he knows he’ll get a treat from you, but because he wants to teach you something about wildness, he is not, in any way, unpleasant. Though he may muddy your tile, may shed dust on the floor next to your bed, may even, in his exuberance, plant filthy paws on your chest, there’s nothing unclean about this animal. When you bury your face in his coat you’ll smell three things; the warm scent of a living thing, the green vividness of the world outside your door, and the soft, cool smell of contentment. Of these things, which can you object to, or what’s not to love?
I suspect that this difference in smell is as much about the healthiness of the animals spirit as it is about their specific living conditions. How can you flourish when you are not whole? How can you be whole when a part of your nature is denied? I’m not advocating complete freedom, or a life without rules by any means. But dogs, like boys, have a wildness in them which must be encouraged. To deny it in either species (and I don’t think any of you will disagree that a human boy is its own unique and challenging species) is to deny an essential part of them.
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