Dogs Don't Understand Basic Concepts Like Moving

Packing all of your belongings into a U-Haul and then transporting them across several states is nearly as stressful and futile as trying to run away from lava in swim fins.  


I know this because my boyfriend Duncan and I moved from Montana to Oregon last month.  But as harrowing as the move was for us, it was nothing compared to the confusion and insecurity our two dogs had to endure.  

Our first dog is - to put it delicately - simple-minded.  Our other dog is a neurotic German shepherd mix with agonizingly low self-esteem who has taken on the role of "helper dog" for our simple dog.  Neither dog is well-equipped with coping mechanisms of any kind.  

When we started packing, the helper dog knew immediately that something was going on.  I could tell that she knew because she becomes extremely melodramatic when faced with even a trivial amount of uncertainty.  She started following me everywhere, pausing every so often to flop to the ground in an exaggeratedly morose fashion - because maybe that would make me realize how selfish I was being by continuing to pack despite her obvious emotional discomfort.     


When the soul-penetrating pathos she was beaming at me failed to prevent me from continuing to put things in boxes, the helper dog became increasingly alarmed.  Over the ensuing few days, she slowly descended into psychological chaos.  The simple dog remained unfazed. 


Unfortunately for the helper dog, it took us nearly a week to get everything packed up.  By the time we were ready to begin the first part of our two-day journey to Oregon, she seemed almost entirely convinced that she was going to die at any moment.  She spent the entire car ride drooling and shaking uncontrollably.  


But the simple dog seemed to enjoy the trip. 


Even though she threw up seven times. 


She actually seemed to like throwing up.  To the simple dog, throwing up was like some magical power that she never knew she possessed - the ability to create infinite food.  I was less excited about the discovery because it turned my dog into a horrible, vomit-making perpetual motion machine.  Whenever I heard her retch in the backseat, I had to pull over as quickly as possible to prevent her from reloading her stomach and starting the whole cycle over again.  

But as far as the simple dog was concerned, it was the best, most exciting day of her life.  


It wasn't until we stopped for the night in Umatilla that the simple dog became aware that there was any reason for her to feel anxious.  But at around two o'clock in the morning, the simple dog finally realized that something was different and maybe she should be alarmed.


This particular dog is not anywhere near the gifted spectrum when it comes to solving problems.  In fact, she has only one discernible method of problem solving and it isn't even really a method. 


But making high-pitched noises won't solve your problem if your problem is a complete inability to cope with change.  Unfortunately for everyone involved, the simple dog did not understand this concept and she went right ahead and made an interminable amount of noise that was just invasive enough to make sleeping impossible. 

After an hour of failed attempts at comforting the simple dog, her constant, high-pitched emergency-distress-signal became a huge problem.  

I tried to communicate my displeasure to the simple dog, but communicating with the simple dog usually goes like this:


She was going to make that sound forever if she felt it was necessary.  We tried everything from spooning her to locking her in the bathroom, but none of it was even the slightest bit effective.  



The simple dog made the noise all through the night and was still going strong the next morning. When we were loading the dogs into the car, the constant, high-pitched sound emanating from the simple dog finally broke the helper dog.  The helper dog wailed in anguish, which alarmed the simple dog.  In her surprise, the simple dog let out a yelp, which further upset the helper dog.  And so it continued in a wretched positive-feedback loop of completely unnecessary noise.


When we finally arrived at our new house, the dogs had calmed down considerably.  Unfortunately, it had snowed the night before and there was still snow on our front lawn, and that was enough to catapult both dogs back into hysteria.  

The simple dog had either never experienced snow or she'd forgotten that she knew what it was, because when we let her out of the car, she walked around normally for about seven seconds, then she noticed the snow and her feeble little mind short-circuited.


At first, the simple dog was excited about the snow.  She started prancing around the yard like she was the star of a one-dog parade - her recent personal crisis overshadowed by a haze of enthusiasm. 


The prancing turned to leaping and the leaping turned to running chaotically in stupid little circles. Then she just stopped and stared at the ground.  There was a visible shift in her demeanor as she realized that she didn't understand snow and it was everywhere and she should probably be scared of it. She started making the noise again. 


Not surprisingly, the helper dog interpreted the snow as a sign of her imminent demise.  But she was so exhausted from worrying about all of the other signs of her demise that she just gave up and accepted her death.  She peered up at us, half-buried in the snow.  Her eyes were filled with pain and helplessness, as if she thought we had summoned the snow for the sole purpose of making her sad.


We decided that it would probably be best to bring the dogs inside.  

As a condition for allowing us to have dogs in our rental house, our landlady made us promise that we wouldn't let the dogs scratch the wood floors.  We didn't anticipate it being a problem because it hadn't been in the past, but as soon as our dogs set foot in the house, they morphed into perfectly engineered floor-destroying machines.  They started sprinting as fast as they could for absolutely no reason - skittering around in circles to avoid running into the walls.  


We finally corralled them in the bedroom and shut the door to give ourselves a little time to regroup and come up with a plan.  Until we could get some rugs or convince the dogs that it was unnecessary to sprint around chaotically for no reason, we would need to find some way to prevent them from scratching the floors.  What we ended up doing was going to the pet store and buying two sets of sled dog booties. It was the only way.

It is easy to imagine that a dog who has recently experienced a dramatic upheaval of its formerly safe and predictable life might not react well to suddenly having strange objects attached to all four of its feet.  This was most definitely the case with the booties.

The helper dog panicked and started trying to rip the booties off with her teeth. 


I scolded her and she reacted as if I'd ruined her entire life. 


But at least her immobilizing self-pity kept her from chewing the booties off.

The simple dog just stood there and looked at me in a way that would suggest she didn't realize her legs still worked.


They had to wear the booties for two days.  Those two days were filled with the most concentrated display of overemotional suffering I have ever witnessed.  The simple dog spent most of her time standing in the middle of the room looking bewildered and hurt and the helper dog refused to walk, instead opting to flop her way around the house like a dying fish.  


The entire ordeal was punctuated by the simple dog's high-pitched confusion alarm. 

We were beginning to think that our dogs were permanently broken. Nothing we did helped at all to convince the dogs that we had only changed houses and our new house was not, in fact, some sort of death-camp and we weren't actually planning on killing them to fulfill an organ harvest ritual.  Despite our best efforts, they continued to drift around in a sea of confusion and terror, pausing only to look pitiful. 

But while we were unpacking, we found a squeaky toy that was given to us as a gift shortly before we moved.  We offered the toy to the dogs.  This may have been a mistake. 

Upon discovering that the toy squeaked when it was compressed forcefully, the simple dog immediately forgot that she'd ever experienced doubt or anxiety ever in her life.  She pounced on the toy with way more force than necessary, over and over and over.  The logic behind her sudden change in outlook was unclear.   


But at least she was happy again. 

2,464 comments:

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Unknown said...

Epic. And on a much less epic note, my hometown is Hermiston, right next to good old skeezy Umatilla. I don't blame your dogs for freaking out that night!

Anonymous said...

the picture of the german shephard in the snow made me laugh so damn hard!! your dogs are hilarious. :)

Abby said...

I don't usually comment, but this post made me laugh so much, it was great :D

Fred Miller said...

Dogs in shoes? It's only fair since you were crossing two states in asbestos flippers.

Amy said...

Why are you so funny?

Also, in a future post, could you please draw a picture of a groundhog? I just feel like you could draw an awesome groundhog.

That is all.

Lou said...

We had to move across country from Connecticut to Vancouver, WA this summer. SOOOOO glad there were no pets in the equation. It was bad enough getting adjusted myself.

halfling said...

OMG, I laughed so hard I cried.

Anonymous said...

me and the simple dog deal with problems in the exact same way.

Anonymous said...

This is hilarious.. Great writing and illustrations.

*tarazza said...

Allie, you make everything better. I love simple dog and helper dog.

Lauren said...

This totally reminds me of moving across the country as a child with the family cat. Although somewhat quieter, I'm sure she was as thoroughly traumatized.

On another note, I'm happy to see you AND boyfriend both moved. I've just finished going through all the archives, and you two seem so cute together. When you said in your previous post that "I moved", instead of "we moved", my little grammarian self read way too much into the pronoun and was worried that maybe there'd been some sort of horrible breakup and now you were moving across the country to leave the awfulness behind, or something equally dramatic.

PS I'm totally addicted to your blog. I'm going through withdrawls now that I don't have archives to read anymore...it's kind of like on Netflix when you watch all of a show's episodes in two weeks and then you mope around unable to watch anything else because nothing is nearly as cool as the show you've just run out of...

Reg said...

OMG. This is just too funny. I have lived with dogs like these! Thanks for a good laugh.

hopelessromantic said...

I love simple dog!!!

r3 said...

Thank you SO MUCH for your post!

You have this amazing ability and gift to tell a story and immediately transport me there with you. I can mentally visualize the dogs, the trip, the noises, everything.

I knew exactly what you meant by "helper dog" and "simple dog" because I have had such pets in my life. Their internal emotions and thought processes couldn't have been more clearly illustrated until I saw them in your drawings and described in your writing.

I so enjoy your writing and drawings. I look forward to them all the time. I really appreciate the time and effort you put into each one.

Please keep up the great work, enjoy your new home, and I hope that UNPACKING is less of a chore than packing was!!! :)

tekgrlbamf said...

You are a comedic genius. Nothing makes me laugh like your posts. Thank you.

Anonymous said...

This was so funny. I laughed until I cried. It's very hard to laugh like that while in a cubical next to your boss. :-)

Anonymous said...

You always crack me up! Hope helper dog is doing better. The story ended with me still worried about him/her!
--Jess

trish said...

We moved our cat from the Midwest to the East Coast. She had a similar experience. She meowed a rather plaintive, panicked meow for the entire 14 hour trip. The louder we turned the music, the louder she got, drowning it out.

Thankfully she has gotten slightly better at car rides, as we do two a year to see family in Illinois. She only meows now if we have the radio on or if we talk. Then she'll crawl under the back seat and fall asleep. Fourteen hour drives are fun in complete silence, so we usually just put up with meowing (which thankfully (really?) is more annoyed and displeased than panicked and imminent-doom-filled).

LilPixi said...

Amazeballs & Awesome Sauce!!! 5 stars.

isarolf said...

Excellent!!! I'm fairly new to your blog (one of my friends recommended it) but I've become such a fan! I love your humor! You always make me laugh! Thx again! Ps.. I will never misspell a lot again!!

RJ said...

:) Brilliant. my favourite post yet!

Anonymous said...

an excellent portrayal of simple and helper dog psychology. looking forward to the follow-up

Maxine Dangerous said...

My GOD, I love you. :D

biochick said...

Do you have a nanny-cam in my house? I think you are talking about my dogs. They did the same thing and we only moved 7 miles down the street! I just wish my high pitched squeeky dogs had any interest in squeeky toys.

Erin Moxam said...

As the owner of three dogs, one simple minded, one neurotic shepard and one elderly, I think this is one of the most entertaining things I have ever seen in my life. Thank you for posting it.

Roy Wood said...

Hilarious, poor doggies. Thanks! :D

Anonymous said...

Oh god. I MUST stop reading this blog in public. It makes me LOL uncontrollably for long periods of time, always at the worst moments.

Anonymous said...

My dog actually handled my move well when he was just under a year old. Now he's 4 and we are moving again soon. I wonder how this is going to go!

Licketysplit said...

Dear god. Glad you arrived in one piece. I moved a cat and a child across town last year, less than 5 minutes, and they both threw up too. At least locking them in the bathroom did seem to do the trick once we arrived. Perhaps I should hold off on a dog?

Lena said...

That was totally amazing. My dog is almost exactly like the helper dog. She had a psychotic break after we moved to my new apartment, and she's never been the same since. And it's been like.. a year a half.

Stephanie G said...

My poor pup is 2.5 years old and has moved 3 times. Fortunately, she survived all of it like a champ. But I've likely exhibited the behavior of both of your dogs!

Anonymous said...

Oh, I feel your pain. My dog also interprets packing and boxes as a sign of imminent doom. She's a ham, and they call them puppy dog eyes for a reason, but I have no where near your drawing skill. Thanks for sharing.

Unknown said...

Me and my friend had our morning made by this one, I guarantee(eeeeee?) you we'll be saying EEEEEEEEE all day and see who's the better sound maker :P

Seán,
http://seanisthemonkey.blogspot.com/

Anonymous said...

A friend of mine in California tuned me in to your blog today. I have just spent the last 15 minutes giggling and guffawing outloud while reading about your dogs. This is hysterical and I love your drawings!

Ramona said...

I really did laugh so hard I cried! So funny.

Anonymous said...

Absolutly Awesome!

Anonymous said...

Absolutly Awesome!

Lynne Goldman said...

Brilliant. Simply brilliant. I have a "smart" dog (male terrier mix) and a "simple" dog (female mini-schnauzer). Just recently my husband characterized them perfectly. The smart dog - "well, you look in his eyes and you just know there are deep thoughts going on in his head." The simple dog..."her head is filled with primary colors." Ha! So when I saw your drawings I really laughed. Thanks so much for sharing and best of luck in your new home.

johnson said...

full of cartoons

- wauwatosa apartments

Ryan said...

Nice, Allie.

So Duncan is his name? Never knew that before.

*Adds to personal profile I keep of EVERYBODY*

Ryan said...

Nice, Allie.

So Duncan is his name? Never knew that before.

*Adds to personal profile I keep of EVERYBODY*

Anonymous said...

Holy crap. Best dog story ever.

flit said...

Thanks so much for this. It was hilarious, and just what I needed to change the tenor of my day.

ggill1970 said...

woah...EPIC post. having a rough time reading this at work suppressing random bouts of giggling. (2) paws up !

Tina said...

My little dog is sick right now, so my daughter sent this to me for a little pick-me-up. I gotta tell ya, I HAVE NEVER LAUGHED SO HARD FOR SO LONG in my LIFE!!! I was GASPING for air by the time I got to the end! Thank you SO much for that MUCH needed blast!

Tina said...

My little dog is sick right now, so my daughter sent this to me for a little pick-me-up. I gotta tell ya, I HAVE NEVER LAUGHED SO HARD FOR SO LONG in my LIFE!!! I was GASPING for air by the time I got to the end! Thank you SO much for that MUCH needed blast!

Tina said...

My little dog is sick right now, so my daughter sent this to me for a little pick-me-up. I gotta tell ya, I HAVE NEVER LAUGHED SO HARD FOR SO LONG in my LIFE!!! I was GASPING for air by the time I got to the end! Thank you SO much for that MUCH needed blast!

Pete said...

Excellent. You captured the enigma inside a puzzle inside a pile of crap that is my dog perfectly! :-)

Arian said...

I almost peed at my desk trying not to laugh out loud. You also owe me a new keyboard from coffee spray. :)

Anonymous said...

I lol'd so hard.

Pete said...

Excellent. You captured the enigma inside a sudoku inside a pile of crap that is my dog perfectly!

DJ said...

Love it, Allie. :-)

Ericka said...

this is the happiest I have been in 2 weeks. Thank you!

I am now a forever fan.

Krissy said...

Girl, that was hiLARious! Everyone knows a dog like that who doesn't have it all there, but boy are they entertaining.

Krissy said...

Girl, that was hiLARious! Everyone knows a dog like that who doesn't have it all there, but boy are they entertaining.

Krissy said...

Girl, this was hiLARious! Everyone knows a dog like that, and you captured those thoughts perfectly. Boy, what joy they bring to our lives. Wait.. That was joy you were expressing, right?

britta is an asshole said...

every time i think that i've forever crossed the line into pure nihilism, you post something like this and make me start caring about things again. thank you... i think.

Lyssa said...

This is an absolutely hilarious post! I had to drug my dog when we moved her from Texas to Colorado ...

Lyssa said...

This is an absolutely hilarious post! I had to drug my dog when we moved her from Texas to Colorado ...

edie said...

You win the internet. You win and everyone else loses.

edie said...

You win the internet. You win and everyone else loses.

edie said...

You win the internet. You win and everyone else loses.

Gina Schreck said...

Im still wiping tears of laughter from my eyes---I had two dogs (BIG simple dog and little dramatic helper dog) Simple dog is gone making dramatic dog even more crazy and dramatic. This was such a great piece! Thank you~

Gina Schreck said...

Im still wiping tears of laughter from my eyes---I had two dogs (BIG simple dog and little dramatic helper dog) Simple dog is gone making dramatic dog even more crazy and dramatic. This was such a great piece! Thank you~

S. Elias said...

this was truly hilarious - i am in my school library and i had to literally cover my mouth to oppress my laughter - thanks, this made my day as a dog lover/owner!

sheara121 said...

this is the first post i've read on your blog, and it's so awesome! thank you! hubby is in the other room, asking (in a very concerned voice) what i keep laughing at. you've made my day!

Pearl Berries said...

I think your Helper Dog and my dog are siblings. Everything from your illustrated depictions, to the description of dealing with stress are accurate!

Needless to say, I totally lol'd!

Jane said...

My dog totally acts the same way as your slow dog. ;D

Erin said...

Wow! you are brilliant. Funniest thing I have ever read.

tron said...

this is seriously the funniest thing i've seen all week.

Katy said...

Oh, I died! I own a "german shepherd low-self-esteem helper dog". PERFECT.

Anonymous said...

Please make a poster out of the picture " I made food...I'm magical!". I totally want to buy it!

AndyB said...

I haven't laughed this much in such a long, long time! Thank you, thank you so much!

leigh said...

so great to have you back!! Great post... our dog was inconsolable when we moved for a good week, and it was merely across town. The thing that finally saved him? A kong filled with peanut butter. ;)

Heather Anne Hogan said...

Of all the one billion hilarious things I have read in my life, this? Was the funniest. I had to walk away from my laptop because I was crying so hard.

Heather Anne Hogan said...

Of all the one billion hilarious things I have read in my life, this? Was the funniest. I had to walk away from my laptop because I was crying so hard.

April Johnson said...

This may be the Sudafed talking, but this is the funniest post since I read How a Fish Nearly Destroyed My Childhood and became addicted to your blog.

Thanks for making me laugh when I feel like crap at my desk! You're my total hero for the day!

April Johnson said...

This may be the Sudafed talking, but this is the funniest post since I read How a Fish Nearly Destroyed My Childhood and became addicted to your blog.

Thanks for making me laugh when I feel like crap at my desk! You're my total hero for the day!

Ginette said...

Wow, I needed that. We have a neurotic dog and simple/sweet dog and this hit so close to home it had me crying from laughing so hard. The artwork is fabulous. Thank you - hysterical.

amanda77kr said...

You captured a dog's psyche perfectly. ROFL. I'm gonna share this with my two dogs and point out how lucky they are that we let them scratch the wood floors and not have to wear booties. They'll probably run in chaotic circles of joy.

Anonymous said...

I know this because my boyfriend Duncan and I moved from Montana to Oregon last month.

isnt it fiancee now? when you posted that photo the first thing i thought was "OMG IM SO HAPPY FOR HER!" and then i thought "OMG SHE'LL CALL HIM FIANCEE INSTEAD OF BOYFRIEND NOW!?

Monica in VT said...

This was wonderful. Thanks for sharing. I was sitting at work laughing so hard with my hand over my mouth so that my boss couldn't hear me. I will now go and share this gem with the peoples of Facebook.

Anonymous said...

I spit coffee on my computer from unexpected laughter. *Note to self* do not drink anything while reading this blog. THANKS!!

Anonymous said...

I spit coffee on my computer from unexpected laughter. *Note to self* do not drink anything while reading this blog. THANKS!!

Gleemonex said...

I hope you don't mind -- I printed out that first panel and put it on my cube wall at work (with attribution, of course!).

CHRIST I LOVE THIS COMIC. You are a god. The god of comics.

fairbetty said...

Hilariousness! I moved across country in June... 7 days in the car with 4 cats and a dog... I blogged about it, too... not quite as succinctly as you did, and not with the awesome illustrations... great post.

MiddleAgedMalcontent said...

I was having a very stressful day until my husband emailed me this blog. I started to laugh so hard at work, I had to leave and go to the ladies room to compose myself and fix my makeup.

THANKS!!

Elizabeth said...

totally love it!

Elizabeth said...

totally love it!

Elizabeth said...

totally love it!

Elizabeth said...

totally love it!

Unknown said...

I just laughed out loud at my desk. My coworkers scurried over and we all laughed ourselves to tears over your horribly accurate blog. I don't know you due to your lack of 'about', but you are obviously awesome. And a super talented artist. This blog rocks.

SpontaneousMom said...

I love lauging out loud at work!! and it seems that you have a knack for making that happen- thank you!

SpontaneousMom said...

I love lauging out loud at work!! and it seems that you have a knack for making that happen- thank you!

SpontaneousMom said...

I love lauging out loud at work!! and it seems that you have a knack for making that happen- thank you!

tsc0809 said...

I am dying here...this is so hilarious and creative and love the artwork!

tsc0809 said...

I am dying here...this is so hilarious and creative and love the artwork!

craicmonkey said...

Once again, you've made me laugh until tears. I am especially fond of your dog stories because, having a dog of my own, I am amazed at how you can tap into their psyche and bring us the truth. The agonizing, hilarious truth.

tsc0809 said...

I am dying here...this is so hilarious and creative and love the artwork!

Susan Helene Gottfried said...

I've played with the idea, off and on, of supplementing my cats with a dog. The time is right; one of my cats passed on this week.

But after reading this?

No way. No how.

tsc0809 said...

I am dying here...this is so hilarious and creative and love the artwork!

Unknown said...

while this post was amazing, the last picture ruins it all due to the fact that they are indeed not wearing booties. i assumed perhaps this is because it was taking place after the two day booty stretch but then why does helpful dog still lay on the floor as if he has booties on? all of this confusion leads me to believe that maybe there were no booties at all. is that you, M. Night Shyamalan? What have you done with Allie?!

Wallydraigle said...

So worth the wait. I think this is the most incapacitated I've been after reading one of your posts in a long time (and even the non-incapacitating ones are hilarious). I laughed so hard, I vomited seven times just reading this.

Nicole said...

HAHAHA Poor Helper dog, I hope she gets used to the move soon! And I LOVED the post!

Jordan. said...

Last month I moved from Seattle, WA to Austin, TX with two Great Danes, and the experience was nearly identical - down to the simple dog/helper dog designations and the hardwood floors. I share your pain, and appreciate the ridiculous amounts of humor.

Speaking of, I laughed so hard that I nearly lost bladder control, and have certainly pissed off at least half a dozen of my co-workers.

I used to live in Bend, also. Beautiful place! And hopefully lots of time for more posts.

L. A. Howard said...

Oh lord, that has me in TEARS it's so funny! XD XD XD

L. A. Howard said...

Oh lord, that has me in TEARS it's so funny! XD XD XD

Anonymous said...

Is it possible to rupture one's spleen from laughing? Because I think I did.

You're a genius -- thanks for sharing your gifts with us!

crowyhead said...

I just moved cross-country from Philadelphia to Neskowin,OR. While I didn't have dogs to contend with (thank god), this offered me some much-needed laughter therapy after what's been kind of a hellish week and a half. I just finished reading this at the McMenamins in McMinnville (we are on our way to PDX to buy a futon, woo), and I feel SO much better about life.

Kate Geisen said...

Love it!

And 1100 comments? Holy crap!

L. A. Howard said...

Oh lord, that has me in TEARS it's so funny! XD XD XD

Stacy K said...

Hilarious!! My 2 are almost exactly like this (same colors just reversed - dofus is red & too smart tri), but nowhere near as funny :) Thanks for a great laugh!

Citizen Deux said...

I laughed and cried and wet myself. Fantastic.

Anonymous said...

this has got to be one of the funniest things I have ever read. i ahve two dogs EXACTLY like this. my "helper dog" acts like the world is ending so we call her "Eeyore" from winnie the pooh. hilarious!

Anonymous said...

This is my favorite by far! Your two dogs even look--and act--just like mine--scary!

Anonymous said...

this has got to be one of the funniest things I have ever read. i ahve two dogs EXACTLY like this. my "helper dog" acts like the world is ending so we call her "Eeyore" from winnie the pooh. hilarious!

Anonymous said...

Absolutely hilarious. Fantastic illustrations.

Anonymous said...

Allie, you just really crack me up while I'm at work. My boss appreciates it. And your website :)

Anonymous said...

this has got to be one of the funniest things I have ever read. i ahve two dogs EXACTLY like this. my "helper dog" acts like the world is ending so we call her "Eeyore" from winnie the pooh. hilarious!

Anonymous said...

this has got to be one of the funniest things I have ever read. i ahve two dogs EXACTLY like this. my "helper dog" acts like the world is ending so we call her "Eeyore" from winnie the pooh. hilarious!

Anonymous said...

this has got to be one of the funniest things I have ever read. i ahve two dogs EXACTLY like this. my "helper dog" acts like the world is ending so we call her "Eeyore" from winnie the pooh. hilarious!

Anonymous said...

this has got to be one of the funniest things I have ever read. i ahve two dogs EXACTLY like this. my "helper dog" acts like the world is ending so we call her "Eeyore" from winnie the pooh. hilarious!

Anonymous said...

this has got to be one of the funniest things I have ever read. i ahve two dogs EXACTLY like this. my "helper dog" acts like the world is ending so we call her "Eeyore" from winnie the pooh. hilarious!

Anonymous said...

Allie, you just really crack me up while I'm at work. My boss appreciates it. And your website :)

Amy S. said...

I also laughed until I cried. Thank you!

Katherine said...

I think if you combined your two dogs, you would get a slightly-better-adjusted version of my dog. I laughed hysterically the whole way through this while trying not to wake my roommate up.

Anonymous said...

holy shit

Katherine said...

I think if you combined your two dogs, you would get a slightly-better-adjusted version of my dog. I laughed hysterically the whole way through this while trying not to wake my roommate up.

Anonymous said...

made my day :D

Psycho said...

I am trembling with new-post goodness. I have read it once, and I will read it again with my brother. We share a sense of humour (damn straight I spell humour with a u- I'm Canadian and British) so we always wind up laughing at the same moments and looking at each other with 'inorite?' expressions on our faces. Hyperbole and a Half has brought us closer together as siblings.

Anonymous said...

That was one of the funniest things I've ever read. Thank you!

Anonymous said...

I'm waiting for the angst-filled poetry from the Helper Dog.

Anonymous said...

This was so hilarious!! Thanks for the rip roaring laughs. My gut aches.

Unknown said...

I laughed until I literally cried and couldn't breathe. Thank you.

Anonymous said...

Completely made me laugh out loud, genius!

Anonymous said...

That was awesome - I laughed so hard, I think I strained something.

Thank you very much!

Hot in Cleveland said...

As the owner of two cats, one of which hides in impossible-to-extricate-her-from places prior to each move (so that it is necessary to leave her behind until she can be removed by professionals) and the other of which once howled agonizingly in her carrier all the way from Binghamton, New York to Cleveland, Ohio (an approximately 6-hour howlathon), I laughed at this until I cried. The world cannot thank you sufficiently for having written it.

(Well, truth be told, the last time they were moved, both of them made it relatively easy for me by hiding in the box spring, from which it was relatively easy to extricate and containerize them. But the howling, briefer than the previous time around but still agonizing, remains a tradition.)

Maria, The Awesome said...

But what happened to helper dog!?!?

Yay for new posts! Your stories always make my day. :)

Ashley said...

Every time I check your blog to see if you've posted anything new, and you haven't I reread everything you've posted. I've read through this particular one about 7 times now and I'll probably read it again in a couple hours. Your posts always make me laugh and everything stops sucking. Keep being awesome.

Ashley said...

Every time I check your blog to see if you've posted anything new, and you haven't I reread everything you've posted. I've read through this particular one about 7 times now and I'll probably read it again in a couple hours. Your posts always make me laugh and everything stops sucking. Keep being awesome.

Ashley said...

Every time I check your blog to see if you've posted anything new, and you haven't I reread everything you've posted. I've read through this particular one about 7 times now and I'll probably read it again in a couple hours. Your posts always make me laugh and everything stops sucking. Keep being awesome.

Ashley said...

Every time I check your blog to see if you've posted anything new, and you haven't I reread everything you've posted. I've read through this particular one about 7 times now and I'll probably read it again in a couple hours. Your posts always make me laugh and everything stops sucking. Keep being awesome.

Anonymous said...

OMFG - tears of laughter here, literally. Posted a link on Facebook and it's already going viral. Best post *ever*. :)

M M said...

I have had to use those booties before, and my parents dachsund would spend the first few minutes flopping around like we had somehow cut her feet off before realizing that her feet were still there. This happened every single day when we would put them on her for her walk!

Anonymous said...

Hi Allie,

I came to your blog from a posting on Fark.com. I don't know when I have laughed so hard. I just spent the whole day reading your entries and I enjoyed them very much. I have to tell you raising a daughter with adhd myself, the god of cake, and the fish story were gold! I loved the chance to read from the child's perspective because being the Mom I could totally relate to you both!

Anonymous said...

Holy shit it has been a while that i have found something on the internet that really made me laugh but this, this made me laugh hard. Thank you

Anonymous said...

This is why rescued dogs are always a bad idea.

Anonymous said...

so, so funny! thanks!

Iroar said...

What are those random blue splotches in the background?

I hate dogs but reading about them from you is wonderful!

Oh.. this is my first time commenting. I bet you don't read your comments huh? They're extremely boh-ring!

Anonymous said...

Distraction always works with the small humans as well. LOL

Ireland said...

allie...you are my favorite.

I love you :)

if I had any pets, I would want them to be as randomly awesome as your dogs.

Jessica said...

This just made my day. I am crying from laughing so hard...

MCB said...

Look at it this way, at least you didn't travel with cats.

Cats offend my delicate nature, regardless of travel. But cats in a car is pure torture. No matter their nature outside of a car situation.

ps, clearly I hate cats.

pss, I don't understand Oregon. But I am from Texas, so that makes sense... no one understands us either.

Anonymous said...

I think I hurt myself laughing!

Ericka said...

i'm moving next week from coastal north carolina to chicago - a 22 hour drive. my two cats are EXACTLY like your two dogs. well, except for being cats.

the stupid one will scream from the time i confine her in the carrier until the time i let her out. the smart one would sleep, except she can't because the stupid one is screaming so she starts screaming for the other one to shut up. oh god, this is going to be hell.

Unknown said...

Best post yet! Pretty please make a t-shirt with the lava burning flipper person on it! That would be so COOL!

Unknown said...

I was having the most HORRIBLE DAY! Then my buddy sent me this....and I laughed my butt off.... I'm moving, and I have boxes all around, and this was just hilarious! Thank you for the laugh...

The Chemist said...

I looooove your blog and I can totally recognize my own dog in your simple dog. However I prefer to call him stupid dog, he seems to like it.

Anonymous said...

Superfunny! Dogs are the best. I'd love to see some actual photos of the dogs, would be fun to compare to the drawings :)

chaitea said...

FYI, snatched burning girl for background. Spent a couple minutes just painfully wheezing at my desk from just staring at the picture. My dog was also a relatively successful laser-transmitted guilt-tripper when he was alive (You're late again! It's time to walk!) I really like how your drawings of people remain just a couple steps up from stick figures (but at the same time have more animation than a CGI still) while the dogs ... well, I think Cesar Milan and any Dog Fancier magazine are missing an opportunity in not offering spot illustrations.

Welcome to the Northwest, land of sleeping volcanoes.

Cait said...

Yay finally a new post! Totally made my day.

Mom2JandK said...

"helper dog refused to walk, instead opting to flop her way around the house like a dying fish"

OMG, I laughed so hard! Thank you!!

Unknown said...

LOL, I couldn't stop laughing, my head hurts. LOL.

Great post!! i can totally see my dogs doing the same thing.. lol you captured it perfectly.

Anonymous said...

We have a German Shepard and a mix. They TAKE TURNS being helper and simple so it's not like we can anticipate which is going to have a melt down! I am still wiping the tears from my eyes. Ironically, my laughing out loud caused the German Shepard to come over and nudge me repeatedly - "Are you okay? I am going to lay here wrapped around your chair until you stop this noise!"

VERY funny post. And great drawings.

Flower said...

New to your blog and I love it! I cannot stop reading it, and you are reviving my recently conquered computer addiction.

As far as the dogs go I'm glad I have bunnies. We've never moved but I've brought them to a friend's house here and there where I would stay for long periods of time. The little one who is petrified of everything (including touch) hid in the plastic igloo we have for her the entire time. While the big one tried to own the place through cage escapes and furniture humping. I'm planning on moving in the future so I guess now I'm prepared for the best and worst case scenarios.

~Namaste
.:Flower:.
http://flower-lifeswanderer.blogspot.com/

Elaine said...

I read this at work, and I just covered my mouth with my scarf folded over twice, and both hands, to try to muffle the laughter.

I had to shield my eyes from the screen in order to compose myself.

Thank you so much.

Unknown said...

I live in San Diego, but lived DC for a while with my dogs. I know the whole snow thing and dog booties. This was the best story I have read in a while! Thank you for sharing..now I miss my dogs...even with the melodrama..they are still wonderful!

Garden Mentor said...

hil-freakin'-larious!

Bilsbow Markofkalson said...

I think I pee'd a little.

Anonymous said...

What happened to Helper Dog???

Anonymous said...

DOGGIE POST!!! I am so glad the drawings were not lost when the first post attempt was eaten by the Internet. I am laughing so hard my face hurts! Thank god for new content, it's been so long! I MISS U LONG TIME.

Anonymous said...

OMG .. im moving this week end... i am officialy scared now ... i had banned all squeeze toys from my life.... guess i will have to go shopping

Anonymous said...

SO Funny I had to read it twice today, I laughed out loud a the dog puking and made it my background...then my boss said that a puking dog (even in cartoon form) was inapropriate.....bastard

asdff said...

The picture of the helper dog flopping to the food dish is hilarious.

sarah said...

more dog posts

BlueHeavensAngel said...

Ahahahaha! This made me laugh so much. I think my dogs would freak out if we moved too. They love going for rides, but they always catch on to what we're up to.

I always look forward to your blogs. You do a wonderful job. ^_^

Anonymous said...

I just came across your site the first time today, and felt this welled up sunbeam of happiness project itself out of my belly and up and out of my throat as a giant giggle/guffaw. My coworkers were a bit startled, but this is normal. This post made me laugh so hard that I cried. You have captured the essence of Dogs™ completely and entirely. Thanks for sharing the joy. I salute you, good woman!

Anonymous said...

ha ha ..i moved to bend oregon from florida..try a 6 day drive with a half drugged 105 lb dog in 110 degree heat..went though the same issues except atila spent the whole trip standing on the middle arm rest with his head on my shoulder dog drool soaking my shirt..one night he was so worked up gave him an extra anxiety pill because he was freaking out every time someone walked by the door and i was afraid we would get kicked out and i was really really tired...then had to stay up all night to make sure he was still breathing because he was so drugged out and in the morning had to lift him into the jeep...ugh...fun times..bend was the first place atila every encountered snow..you will love bend it is a totally dog lover kinda place...

Janaya said...

Lovely Lovely Lovely :) hope you like your new house!

P.s. In the picture of you in the car with the wailing dogs, where was Boyfriend?! Did you leave him on the side of the road?

Janaya said...

Lovely Lovely Lovely :) hope you like your new house!

P.s. In the picture of you in the car with the wailing dogs, where was Boyfriend?! Did you leave him on the side of the road?

La La said...

OMG! I about died laughing reading this. Although I didn't move out of state, I moved yesterday about 40 minutes away and just went through the same thing with our dogs!! We also have a cat in the mix of the dog craziness. I can totally relate to this!

Hernia said...

I don't often comment because I think enough is said about your work. This particular post, however, requires critique. I'll start with a compliment: with every post you become a more amazing artist, your progress is a thrill to watch.

There were many great moments and I smiled several times and laughed once or twice (the funny is still there, though no rofl this time). My concern is with how this post ended so abruptly. I sat there thinking... "ok so simple dog was happy again... ok... ok... hold on did I miss something, it's over?". I would say that it was even expected that simple dog would be normalized by something as inane as a squeaky toy. The second to the last illustration seemed redundant given the all the focus those points got throughout the post - it created an anti-climactic ending. I will admit that closing acts is a tough job in comedy.

Beyond anti-climax I was left unfulfilled because I was much more interested in how helper dog was going to get over the situation (if she ever did, btw the rolling across the floor panel was amazing).

I'm being critical only because I know you're awesome and something seemed amiss in your post. Maybe you were feeling the pressure to finish, maybe having to rewrite messed up the flow. I hope you receive this constructively (if you receive it all), because you sincerely make the internet a better place to waste one's time.

Anonymous said...

I just want to know how you got your tiny, T-rex arms around that huge box!

Your drawings could tell the story all by themselves but your words bring even more laughter. I love how your simple dog is thinking "YAAEEY! THE GROUND IS WEIRD! I'M A DOG!" while triumphantly rearing up and arching her back. LMAO!! The swirling dog vortex is fantastic too!

Anonymous said...

Your excellent chronicle makes it clear that you dogs are compensating for a sense that you are emotional unavailability. They formed bonds with the environment of their "den" or the previous home in place of their "pack" or their family/their owners. Not that they shouldn't be somewhat confused and disoriented but I think you are documenting PTSD.

Their PTSD is expressed much like human childhood PTSD, the root of most PTSD. As you so accurately note, when stripped of their false security, that is their bonds with the previous home, one unceasingly expects the next event to be the final end of everything while the other is completely divorced of all but distraction, until a situation presents that it cannot divorce from, then becomes inconsolable.

Those are text book. The child equates emotional unavailability to rejection and rejection to death. The child then transfers security to false sources, such as toys (spoiled child) and distractions such as an imaginary world. But the child is always on edge, overstimulated, moody, melodramatic, unpredictable, erratic. Interesting that a toy becomes the solution for one dog.

It is very likely a reflection of your own childhoods. There is very likely a behavior(s) on your parts, adopted by yourselves and, subsequently, the dogs as normal, that perpetuates this sense of loss/emptiness among your dogs/children. You would accept this behavior(s) as normal because identifying it as abnormal brings your parents' lack of love and/or emotional availability and your own sense of loss/emptiness into stark relief.

I can't be sure because I am a hack, but I think it likely that the dogs would give very immediate barometric readings were you to succeed in replacing the behavior(s) in question with something more genuine. They don't have the layers of mental constructs that a child would. I say genuine because I think you are trying to express your love to these animals.

I note that you characterize them well but very disingenuously. I have no sense of knowing these animals even though I know a lot about them. I know only their condition. Using their actual names might be a step in the right direction even if it does not explain them as well at first. Although I here address your writing, not your life, I imagine you might be so good at it because you practice it in life too.

It may have been true that one dog became withdrawn upon realizing the snow was everywhere. But I wonder about that moment. Were you interacting with it by say, rolling a small snowball across the ground to it versus, say, characterizing it and casting it?

Just a thought. You obviously have the brains to negotiate it all. Welcome to Oregon. Good luck.

--
Agnot

Anonymous said...

i thought it would never end

maidel said...

Dogs are the best. Our last dog decided at age 9 that she hated slippery (i.e., uncarpeted) floors. Have you ever seen a dog stand completely on her toenails, not a pad on the floor, frozen? They're hard to move like that. She was a shepherd/doberman, and like your helper dog, had low self-esteem. She was the sweetest, smartest girl. New dog ignores training, which she totally understands and chooses to ignore, but she's soooo happy.

Julia said...

This is one of the funniest things I have ever read. I laughed out loud the entire time.

Anonymous said...

Oh boy Allie... I check your site all the time and it makes my day when there's a new post. The other site I go to every day is Fark.com. I was delighted to see your blog got greenlit there. I think you're about to behold the power of Fark if you haven't already... In other words, although there are some punk ass bitches with nasty things to say, I think you might find yourself the winner of the internet in the very near future!

Congrats!

Kaileigh Blue said...

I'm am crying this is so awesome.

Anonymous said...

This is amazing - turn this into a book!

Anonymous said...

That was one of the funniest things I have ever seen/read. The drawings greatly complemented the story and humor. Bookmarked! Will share, and will return

Anonymous said...

I am literally crying and I thought I was going to die because i couldn't breath because I was laughing too hard. That was the funniest thing I do believe I have ever read.

MB said...

Awesome post! You should have just left the stupid animals at a rest stop along the freeway. Problem solved.

sheryl gwyther said...

Allie, what a brilliant post, just what the laughter doctor ordered this Friday morning. Thank you - I love your art and your sense of humour and timing! Love the dogs too, hope they've settled into a normal life again. :)
Cheers from Australia

Jessica said...

soooo this may be the funniest thing i've ever read. LOVE the cartoons and the story.

ps i learned of your blog from Healthy Tipping Point.

i seriously can't stop laughing

Jessica said...

soooo this may be the funniest thing i've ever read. LOVE the cartoons and the story.

ps i learned of your blog from Healthy Tipping Point.

i seriously can't stop laughing

herdofnoni said...

that was the most awesome read i have had in a long time!!... most enjoyably hilarious!
i can just picture those dogs.. thankfully i have a cat and as was mentioned by someone else.. they don't give a crap! so long as you feed them and let them out at 4 am!.
love this.. will be reading more of your blogs cause heaven knows a mum of 4 needs something frivolous and funny to read to keep her mind off the insane amount of laundry that keeps breeding behind her in the laundry room...
*it scares me*...

Anonymous said...

Great Story!

ginabad said...

I haven't laughed this hard since college. THANK you!!

Lizzie May said...

Depression is cured after reading this post. Hilarious!

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