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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claire said...

i think you just leveled up your drawing skills by a billion. awesome post!

Nan said...

Just recently discovered your blog, and it is wonderful! Dental surgery (mother mocking her disabled child), the "pretend it doesn't exist" forcefield which controls my life, and of course simple dog and helper dog. We have a deaf boxer who is not simple, but her total deafness makes communication with her continually surprising, and an anxiety-riddled American Eskie who goes into a seizure when my cell phone beeps its low-battery sound.

Thanks for blogging!

Anonymous said...

Hysterical story and illustrations! But I'm missing the end. How did it end for the "helper dog"?!

Lina Anonymous

The Wood Elf's Sister said...

You need to write a book. Publishers would have a bidding war. Honestly. You are probably already in the process.

I have a German Shepherd who is not simple, but I love your writing and your illustrations equally.

I wrote a book about the Iditarod and your pictures of the dogs' reactions to the booties finished me off. I had to wipe the tears off my face and not much makes me laugh so hard that I actually weep.

Anonymous said...

Well to be fair helicoptors are awesome.

Anonymous said...

Thank you Ali! This was wonderful! I'm not sure which is worse, trying to move a cat by car or by plane... My husband took the cat on a plane - in a carrier when he picked up the carrier and put it on his lap after take off, thinking it might calm her down, she found the zipper on the carrier, and forced her head through it. She was wild eyed and drooling and popping out of the bag like the creature from Aliens. He said the businessman next to him did not appear to be impressed.

The move from Detroit to New Orleans was by car. We learned that unless the car is completely stopped the cat won't use the litter box. How did we discover this? Well, the cat likes to ride on the driver's shoulder - all of a sudden there was an awful smell, and a perfectly spherical ball of poop rolling down my husband's arm.

I hope you enjoy your new home!

-A

Anonymous said...

I nearly died laughing when I read this. My room mates had to come in to see what was wrong with me.

You owe me my dignity back .... I LOVE IT! xD

Anonymous said...

I nearly died laughing when I read this. My room mates had to come in to see what was wrong with me.

You owe me my dignity back .... I LOVE IT! xD

Anonymous said...

I nearly died laughing when I read this. My room mates had to come in to see what was wrong with me.

You owe me my dignity back .... I LOVE IT! xD

Anonymous said...

I just moved and have taken great heart in knowing your move may have been even more traumatic than mine.
All the best settling in!

Anonymous said...

Hysterical post! I love the body language and expressions of your dogs. We just found out that one of the family cats appears to be going into kidney failure, so I really needed a laugh.

Jane said...

Oh lordy, your poor minds... animal distress noises of the neverending persuasion can break sanity for sure. I have a cat who behaved in a similar manner when I moved a few months ago: car-ride disaster, keening and whining at me. I shut him and my other cat in new place's bathroom so I could get my room relatively set up and moved into, and when I went in to retrieve them Misery Cat was happy as a clam and Normal Cat had regressed to a state of sheer terror. Now-Terror Cat hid under my bed for several days, and Misery Cat would not accept the fact that he was not allowed back in the Happy Bathroom and attempted great escapes from my room every time I went in or out.
Moving is fun!

Anonymous said...

You should've invested in crates and crate trained them.

Also it would've helped if you learned calming signals for dogs.

I feel really bad for your dogs that they had to go through so much stress and never learned how to cope with it. My dog is just like your helper dog, and she would shut down all the time if she didn't have her crate to fall back to in stressful situations.

Unknown said...

I think we may have the twins of each other's dogs. Perhaps there is some sort of canine parent trap at play. I have a simple dog, Zoey, and a helper dog, Sara. Sara is a neurotic ball of tenseness who spends half her time trying to understand every word we say and what our motives are while denying her overall dogness. Zoey.... Zoey is an innocent soul. I was crying while laughing at this post as I now anticipate the same pattern of events when we move in May. Perhaps I can learn from this and start with the toy early on. Thanks for the laughs as usual!

Fatima said...

The content is great, congratulations! gOOOOODDDD!

JoyceyBabey said...

OMG! That was fantastical! I was crying from laughing so hard because I could totally imagine the dogs doing that! Animals do have such personalities don't they? I imagined my cat meowing and throwing up whenever I put him in the car to move (and that was a lot... nothing ever comforted him. However he did eventually stopped throwing up).

Thanks so much for the laugh! I read it again just for kicks and shared it with family and friends!

Anonymous said...

Laughed until I cried.We too just moved to a house with wood floors...very intelligent dog reduced to hilarious acrobatics!
Thank-you for the story.

Phil said...

Hilarious as always.

mtnrunner2 said...

Absolutely hilarious. Thanks.

Emily said...

I recently had surgery on my mouth and in the process of reading this i laughed so much my mouth started bleeding

now isn't that just messed up

:)

Iota said...

Oh my gosh!!! I laughed so hard. A friend sent this to me. I tell stories of having to sedate my dog the first time we ever moved. He freaked out so bad. He was chewing the paint off the walls, and trying to dig holes in the floor.

Jordan said...

OH GOD I LAUGHED MYSELF SICK...

Navhelowife said...

Oh my word! You had me laughing so hard I almost fell off the couch! You have perfectly captured the inner workings of dogs!

Anonymous said...

Hilarious.
Marry me.

BAC said...

I love this. I have 3 dogs, who act much the same as your two.

BAC

Mychelle said...

Amazing! But I see you have no passenger while you were driving. Where was Boyfriend?

Mychelle said...

Amazing! But I see you have no passenger while you were driving. Where was Boyfriend?

Harvest said...

Jesus, 2k comments? Thats pretty much infinity comments. I think its safe to say youre famous now.

I loved the post, by the way.

Have you enjoyed the outdoors today? said...

Fantastic entry! Thanks for posting...(owner of two spastic yellow labs)

Anonymous said...

I'm not sure how I stumbled on this site but I could not be happier that I did. Your whole story and the drawings (OMG THE DRAWINGS!!!) had me laughing out loud with tears streaming down my face. Without a doubt, this is the best told dog related story I have heard in a VERY long time. I think the pictures are what make it. Thank you for taking time to document this story. Hope your dogs are doing well!

Anonymous said...

You should consider making this into a book so more than 2000 people can enjoy it! Best Wishes!

Anonymous said...

OhdearGod Lauging uncontrollably as I read your post for the 3rd time. Yes, laughing til I cry and an unable to breathe. Love it!!!

Alicia said...

Another winner! Omgosh I can't stop laughing and crying for those poor puppies at the same time.

Those poor sad eyes on the helper dog. You are a genius!

A. Lister said...

I loved this read!

I also have a dog who is (as you so tactfully put it) simple-minded, and was reminded of him every moment.

Thanks for posting this brilliant article.

Stephanie said...

This is the most amazing thing I have ever read.

asha said...

Wonderful. Just wonderful. Thank you.

Amy @Coffee Tuesdays said...

How come you give Boyfriend a 'real' name (eg Duncan) but give your dogs code names (eg the helper dog) ? Are you trying to protect their identities?

Anonymous said...

You make the best doggie faces ever :D

Anonymous said...

You are the most amazing person of all of the people ever and I am only anonymous because I don't want my boyfriend to know I'm in love with your brain and want to marry it okay bye I am not creepy.

kelly said...

THANK YOU FOR THIS!!!!! It is brilliant! I read it last night while sitting on the couch buried in dogs...they all stared at me and cocked their heads in concern as mommy was laughing and crying and laughing while reading this on the computer. You are amazing. I have been laughing all day as the images of your illustrations kept coming to mind:):):) Thank you for sharing and making so many people laugh and smile.]
Kelly

Anonymous said...

Was SO happy to see another post from you - the whole thing made me smile! Love your drawings, and the wonderful way you dig into everyday life. By the way, I had a dream I was in a stationery store, and they had a line of cards with your drawings!

Unknown said...

You, Ms. Allie Brosh, have won my heart in a way no other blogger has. Your prose and illustrations weave a tapestry of cute hilarity I haven't seen in... well... ever.

All all innocent creepyness aside, you keep doing what you're doing and the internet will be a nicer place to spend time :)

Anonymous said...

you captured the essence of my two dogs PERFECTLY. a hyperactive border collie and a golden retriever we consider simply special :)

Anonymous said...

Would you PLEASE PUBLISH THIS. Then we can send it to the Middle East and make everyone laugh so hard they cry and remember their humanity. You're going viral with this, truly. It's a beautiful blog. I'm linking you at my docucomic site The LiveAboard.

RS said...

hahhahahahhaha

I feel bad for you.

but im still so amazed by how well u draw on paintbrush with JUST a mouse! THATS INSANE!

RS said...

hahhahahahhaha

I feel bad for you.

but im still so amazed by how well u draw on paintbrush with JUST a mouse! THATS INSANE!

Rachel Lee-Carman said...

lmao!

afguerin said...

Genius!

Fred Miller said...

My cartoons are all with a mouse, too. I'm trying to break myself to use the HyperPen tablet someone gave us because I can get more detail. But it's hard to let go of the mouse.

Archie said...

WOW. YOU ARE SOOOOO AMAZING LOOOOOLLLLLL
I could not stop laughing. I love this.
I love your blog.
I love you.

Unknown said...

Yet ANOTHER reason for "dog whisperers"! This is great! Done that/been there........with three basset hounds! Glad to say they're still as maladjusted as ever, but I love them!

Heidi said...

I've been seeing your blog everywhere and thought I'll have to read it. Glad I did.

Unknown said...

This made me laugh so hard my stomach hurt, I cried and forgot how to breathe.
someone pass me a squeaky toy.

Anonymous said...

I laughed so hard at the words and pictures that tears are running down my face. My little poodle Fluffhead is so upset that I am laughing and crying he is growling at Fat Beagle and trying to get on my lap over and over. Thank you so much!

strgazr said...

The burrito/fighter plane/burrito/worst thing/burrito method worked!!!

Kate said...

Holy cow Allie you NAILED neurotic dogs. Hilarious.

Anonymous said...

I cannot remember the last time I laughed as hard as I did after reading this post. This was actually priceless...

The Gossamer Tearoom said...

I don't know how you will ever see this in the sea of comments you receive (2061????? REALLY????), but I have to tell you this was really one of the funniest things I have read in a really long time! And it would not be so funny if it were not so completely true!! My husband has only ever owned cats and I have only owned dogs. Someday, my husband and one of those strange dog creatures will occupy the same space. I'm not sure if his brain is ready for the challenge. But he must be preparing for the experience because he sent a link to your blog to me!

Thank you! Pure brilliance.

Betty

Claire said...

You are so amazing. My friends and I at school read your blog and WAIT DESPERATELY for new updates!! Thank you so much for making us smile! :)

Flughafen said...

Those noises! Now I understand why my wife becomes so distant when we take trips together....

Anonymous said...

OMG that was great!! Had me laughing so hard I cried! The pictures and your writing was awesome. Thank for one of the best laughs I've had all year. ^_^

Scar said...

I'm in hospital recovering from major surgery and this made my day ^_^

EmBetty said...

Helper dog is clearly an emo. Perhaps they would feel more comfortable in their own skin with a side swept fringe over one eye? Just a thought.

Alex Chalk said...

I would love to hear what an animal psychologist has to say about all this.

Kasia said...

Oh GOD I haven't laughed like this for agggesssss! I had tears streaming down my face whilst in uncontrollable hysterics! Thankyou! I hope they've settled in ok now!

MJ Heiser said...

I want to move to Oregon.

~Oh, wait. Was that not the point of this? I have a bit of an OCD problem.

If I were God... said...

Have you considered that the simple dog might be a canine super-model?
-good looking
-not smart
-seriel puker
-enjoys travel
-has an assistant

Also, why do the dogs looke like dogs (nice drawing BTW) when the people look like angry burritos?

Greeshma. said...

Hahaha! Absolutely hilarious this post was!

Anonymous said...

THIS is super funny too:

http://meowheretohelpmeow.blogspot.com/

Anonymous said...

The first time I had to move my dogs cross-country, one of them got hives all over his entire body and had to be shaved. A big shaved pitbull covered in scabs is EXACTLY what you want in the backseat of an Audi when you're staying in hotels and frequenting rest areas. At least the whining stopped after a dozen states or so...

MoldyPanda said...

My dog is like a combination of your two dogs. He's a simpleton and he's neurotic. I was reading this in class and I had to keep myself from laughing so hard, ha-ha!

Diana said...

HA. A dog owner once told me that if dogs see you packing up your house, they can't process it in the same way we do - they literally think that the world is coming apart (as if removing a picture frame signals that the room is starting to crack open along with their existence). Maybe that explains the helper dog's reaction? Hilarious post!

The J said...

I loved this in a way I unable to describe. Through your story I have discovered just difficult & painful it is to attempt to hold back intense, gut-wrenching, dolphin squealing laughter while someone is asleep in the next room.
Thank you Allie!

Anonymous said...

This is so true!
Just what all dogs do!

I can't draw like that.
My dogs look all flat.

I love all your blogs!
Please draw some more dogs.

Completely insane.
Please do it again.

Mike H said...

This is the funniest thing I've read in a long time, and the artwork is icing on the cake! Why do I say 'artwork' and not simply 'drawings'? Because they're all kinds of awesome - you capture the intent of the topic perfectly... they can't simply be considered 'drawings' :)
Thanks for all the laughter and enjoyment, my wife & I are appreciative!

Anonymous said...

This post is so true!
Just what all dogs do!

I can't draw like that.
My dogs look all flat.

I love all your blogs!
Please draw some more dogs.

Completely insane.
Please do it again.

Missy said...

I have pertussis. Your post just made it 10x worse. And it was the SECOND time I'd read it. And I don't have any dogs. And I'm a doctor, so you'd think I'd know better.

(You must get tired of all the "you made snot fly out of my head and it nearly killed my grandma" comments, but still. You had it coming.)

Love. These.

Pastor Jonathan said...

Very entertaining story! I loved the illustrations too. They remind me of The Far Side.

Anonymous said...

This was such a great post! I have two dogs and moved across Texas a few weeks back (might have been a new state) and they were pretty pissed at us for a few days, but nothing as hilarious as this!! One of them peed everyday, and the other needed to be near me at all times.


By the way, I LOVE the cute expressions and overall demeanor you drew these dogs to have! They seemed to bring out the cute personality in dogs.

Lyn Nave said...

Great words and pictures. Well done!

We also have two dogs and moved (only across town) in June. My husband yelled a lot that first day but the dogs and the cat handled it pretty well.

Anonymous said...

Note to self: NEVER try to read this during First Amendment Seminar Class at law school... I had a rough time not rolling on the floor giggling!

aimee said...

We had a similar event with our cats happen in 2004 when we moved from Boston to Oregon.

One cat held the position of helper dog. One cat held the position of "I love this toasty and full of windows car more than I can ever possibly love a house and you are never ever getting me out"

Binkydoll said...

ouch. my throat and lungs hurt now.

I have the cat version of this - one grown up seemingly normal but totally panicky cat and one that I'm convinced is developmentally disabled (and scared of the dark)

lgray said...

OMG that is one of the funniest things I've ever read.

Maybe next time try a gentle tranquilizer? Poor babies!

Unknown said...

I had the unfortunate pleasure of discovering your website and having this post be the first one I read. I started to read, then called my wife over. I tried my best to read it out loud to her, but when the simple dog started the "Bloop! Bloop!" contest I just could not do it. My feeble attempts at going being an excited, simple-minded pup going "Bloop! Bloop!" out loud to my wife ended up in laughing so hard my throat and lungs hurt by the time I was done reading. Seriously. You try reading this out loud with good sound effects. It is a task. Well played indeed. You have a new follower.

Rebecca Pettigrew said...

<3 Totally made me miss my dogs!

Gerb said...

LOVE this. Laughed all the way through. Hooray for neurotic dogs like mine.

Faith said...

Thank you! I drove from Mexico to Portland with my dog, and am very thankful that our experience was nothing like this... Welcome to PDX! You are a welcome addition to our local blogging community!

CBevan said...

A friend posted a link to this blog post on FB a couple of days ago, and I have been very unproductive since.

My husband looked at me cross-eyed the whole time I read it, becase I was laughing so hard. So I made him read it, and then he knew why I was laughing like that, because he was doing it too.

Over the last couple of days, I went back and read your entire blog, and I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE it. My neuroses never seem so funny when they are happening to me!

And now I am super happy to see that you have over 2000 comments on this post, and are well on your way to owning the interwebs. To further your cause I have recommended your blog to everyone I know. Some of them twice.

SO...

Now I need you to write more stuff. Otherwise I might have to do actual work, and nobody likes that. (well, probably my bosses like it, but not me so much.)
K? Thnx.

SawCasm said...

Great post. My cat hates trips of any kind - she makes this clear by making it a very intense mission to piss in any and all suitcases that enter her domain. I have to lock her up while packing, and then put the suitcase in the car before letting her out, or she will make a beeline for it with her urine. Visitors need to keep suitcases shut in a closet - she doesn't discriminate between mine and theirs. She is an equal opportunity suitcase pisser.

Ryan Michael said...

I read "...was not, in fact, some sort of death-camp and we weren't actually planning on killing them to fulfill an organ harvest ritual"

as

"was not, in fact, some sort of death-camp and we weren't actually planning on killing them to fulfill an orgasm festival."

Dani said...

Where are all the rats??

GREAT story!

Anonymous said...

I want to have a shirt with the 4 panels where simple dog vomits and then decides she's made food and that she is magic.

Gone2theDawgs said...

OK this is the first post I have read of yours....found it on a friends facebook page. You have such an uncanny understanding of your dogs, and I couldn't stop laughing (much to the dismay of the people I work with)! I hope I can find the time to read all your previous posts, etc. (and still carry on with life). I have a couple of dogs similar in brain makeup as yours.... You're my hero!! :D Tammy

Anonymous said...

Oops, make that "5 panels."

Anonymous said...

I laughed out loud at this. Seems we have the same dog - the helper dog, in this case. My Shepherd cross has some very strange issues, although I have yet to see her flop around the floor like a fish! Oh My God, this was a great blog! Made my day!

Eric said...

Awesomeness, I just found you blog and f'ing love it. Well done!

Anonymous said...

I so love your blog. I still look for a new posting even though I only have 20mins of Internet time here in Kuwait. Just so you know you are helping a soldier by providing hilarious entertainment. Thank you.

Yael said...

Just wanted to say that you're hilarious, insane and totally awesome.
I hope that someday you'll have a unicorn. That can shoot laser beams. And has metal wings. And can fly to space. While shitting magical gold.

Unknown said...

Well I hope you're happy. Now I am not speaking to my sister, who sent me the link to the post. With NO graphic enough WARNING! I really truly puked bile into my throat when I got to the booties part. Yes, I LITERALLY threw up in my own mouth a little from laughing too hard.

And you know what happened then? Of course you do - the choking noises resulting sent all of our dogs into a bark frenzy because clearly someone was TRYING TO KILL OUR TRACY!! I managed to assure them that barking would not stop most determined killers once I was already at the choking stage, but it was not in time... no... the worst happened then. Yes. They got Old Deaf Dog barking.

She won't stop until about a week after the next ice age, thanyouverydamnfuckingmuch.

Oh and PS - overly helpful commenters? If she'd wanted advice she'd ask. See previous posts. there is no shortage of free advice on the internet, times 50-quidelebentymiun if dogs or children are involved.

Alex Cameron said...

This is the first time I have seen your blog and I'm so glad I stumbled upon it. Very clever and very funny. You are your very own. TGW

www.thegoodwifehold.blogspot.com

Michelle said...

I am so happy I found your blog. (Well, I didn't actually find it...I saw it linked on a friend's facebook page under the heading "Cackling". But it's sort of like I found it....)

I actually woke up this morning laughing about this post (I too have a "simple" dog and a "helper" dog - so I feel your pain).

And now I can't stop telling friends, my husband, my kids, pretty much anyone I know, about how funny you are. You've turned me into a proselytizer - something I always abhorred. Curse you!!!!!

John James said...

You have made an Irish guy laugh for the first time in about 3 weeks. Danke. :)

Anonymous said...

Just moved to another state and SOO

glad we asked the vet for sedation for our golden. Your story was hilarious!

Jess said...

Our dog has a "shut up" command. I can't actually take any kind of credit for the fact that he actually obeys it (luck), but it does make me feel superior when other dog owners are unsuccessfully trying to get their dogs to stop barking and mine obeys when I tell him "quiet."
Anyway, your post cracked me up, as usual! Oh dogs and moving, a sanity-ruining combination...

Anonymous said...

Fact: you are brilliant. Thanks for making us laugh like a couple loons the first thirty-five times we read this post. My husband and I keep clicking up individual pictures and cracking up all over again. You're awesome... thanks for keeping this blog.
Welcome to Oregon!

Shawnabear13 said...

I'm sure you probably don't have time to read all 2000 comments (well maybe you do, I don't know what you do in your spare time), but I just wanted to let you know that I throughly enjoyed this post. I laughed out loud multiple times. Also, I really loved the drawings of your dogs, the sequence of the helper dog rolling its way around the house to get wherever it was going was one of the most adorable things I've ever seen. So yeah. Keep up the good work, I absolutely love it :D

Susan at Aspiring Arts said...

I super much loved this post. And the whole blog. I had to find anything else dog-related on your blog, so I found the post titled "Dog." It then prompted me to give the IQ test to my doggie, who I already knew was pretty smart, but her quick escape from the blankie (when she had an incentive to - at first, she was sleeping, so who wouldn't want a blanket when you're sleeping? so I called her, and when she came, she quickly shed the blanket) helped to prove it.

I was so proud of her when she knocked the cup over to get the dog biscuit pretty quickly, too - that's a tough one for dogs to learn! Their brains are more like "if you can't see it, it's gone." But she's a super foodie (partly inspired by her early life being starved to emaciation, before she was rescued), so after trying a few things, like asking me politely to turn over the cup, pawing it, and moving it along the floor, she finally knocked it over and retrieved the biscuit.

I wish I could draw/write with your talent to portray my dog's FUNNY new propensity to try to dance with me when I do Zumba on the Wii these days!

Write more about your dogs, please! What's the story with the helper dog?

Ark said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Ark said...

we tried a doggy IQ test you referenced in an earlier post. our dog is only marginally smarter than stupid. which means it's still dumb as bricks.

also, your life is totally the opposite of boring. thanks for the entertainment.

Ixtlilton said...

Ah... my dog is your two dogs combined. God only knows what that dog went through before I adopted her, but she is a squealing mass of mental problems and, um... "simple"ness. She makes a noise like a hyena when she is displeased with life, which is all the time. She also can't control her bladder movements and has brain damage.

I'm looking forward to moving to Ohio with her, especially considering her crippling fear of my car.

Anonymous said...

Welcome to Oregon Allie, Duncan, Simple Dog and Helper Dog! My best friend is getting ready to move out here with our two cats this summer. I hope they do better than your dogs! She sent me this post last week and I have since read almost every single post.

You are right, Oregon is the best place on earth but why Bend??

Scruffy said...

Oh my GOD I love your blog! Any stories about your dog or your childhood and I'm pretty much laughing so hard I'm in physical pain. Awesomeness!

Mike Nettleton said...

We moved from New Mexico to Oregon with 3 dogs and a cat so I can relate to the nth power with story. Whenever we'd stop, the dogs would sniff each other like they'd never met. "Oh, hey, you're here too?" The cat started a yowl that she repeated every 3.9 seconds for the entire trip. My wife just turned up the radio and tried to ignore it.

Alyss said...

Holy dear god.. this made me laugh so hard. Your dogs remind me of my family's dogs. We say Lucky is "a few sandwiches short of a picnic" and our other dog has been known to be afraid of recycling bins. And firewood. Moving? Doggie booties?!? These would send her into collapse much like helper dog :)

I do also want to note that a good positive reinforcement trainer can help you with some ideas on how to work with your crazy pooches so hopefully you don't have to resort to yelling (except in cartoons where it is hilarious). A good trainer will use food treats and very little, if any, corrections or punishments.

Yeah, seriously, this had me in tears. Hilarious.

Anonymous said...

I like this. I like this very much.




:D great post!

Anonymous said...

Awesome post, Allie! Thanks for the laugh. Love your blog! :D

crombiekatie said...

one of the funniest things I have ever read! your inisght into doggy brain is perfect, and the drawings are awesome!

Anonymous said...

This was so well-done and hilarious to read (and I'm sure not to endure) that I re-bruised my ribs from laughing so hard!

Anonymous said...

love your blog!

Kathleen said...

Welcome to Oregon. Please excuse the crappy drivers.

Anonymous said...

LMFAOOOOO HILARIOUS

dbdonlon said...

This is the funniest thing I have read in a very long time. Epic laughs.

Thanks!

Leslie said...

I was sent your blog by a friend. TEARS from laughing. My abs got a work-out. I'm a vet and your pictures and descriptions of your dogs were so spot on and hysterical. Look forward to reading more. :)

Cheklov said...

Welcome to Oregon! Glad you and the dogs survived the trip.

I'd been following you for a while, but just tonight this latest post was featured on KGW, the local channel 8 news.

Congrats on the publicity!

Anonymous said...

I laughed pretty much throughout this entire post. I love your blog!

Anonymous said...

this is absolutely the best entry I've ever read. in my life. you are completely hysterical (&& gorgeous, btw) & I think I want to marry you. ask Boyfriend how he feels about sharing. I've been reading all your posts now! LOVE IT! so glad I found your blog!!!! <3

Anonymous said...

I can't help but feeling that you must be totally freaked out about all of the comments to this post. It's like a good feeling followed by a feeling that you'll have to keep producing your brilliant prose/drawings, leading to a feeling of indebtedness to an amorphous public that you didn't necessarily sign up for, followed by feeling overwhelmed at all of the three thousand steps in the process of delighting them, leading to shutting down and going into MOAR INTERNET until 5am behavior, which isn't productive in a deliverable sense but is fun and could perhaps be called research.

That's how I would feel, alot. :-)

J. B. Crawford said...

Welcome to Oregon! :)

Your drawings are simply delightful.

Anonymous said...

ive never commented before, but this blog is absolute pure genius, i cannot stop laughing... the sp. nahdle makes me giggle uncontrollably... good job allie for keeping america entertained

McJen said...

Awesome post, I'm so glad I found your blog! I always appreciate dogs because you can tell exactly what they are thinking at any moment and I love that you captured the dog voice just right!

skaluski said...

this was the funniest thing i have seen in a min!!!!

Anonymous said...

This is the hardest I've laughed since reading your previous blog about Simple Dog's intelligence test.

I was laughing so hard and so loud that MY dogs just came down to investigate why mom was making such a ruckus. Well done.

Anonymous said...

UBOOOOOOOAAAAAAAAAA!!!!!

jen said...

this is the funniest damn post I've ever read on a blog EVER! Nice.

Lady Jane said...

This was wonderful. I am literally crying from laughter. Thank you, so much, for sharing this with the world. You have made my day.

Suz said...

My stomach still hurts from practically rolling on the floor.. You are great at writing and the drawings are sooo cute! Very funny, love it and Welcome to Oregon!

Anonymous said...

Not as funny as this, but still damn funny! --

http://meowheretohelpmeow.blogspot.com/

Unknown said...

I LOVE your blog! I cry from laughing so hard every time I read it! Thanks for making my day!
I moved to Seattle from Detroit last year... same thing happened to me with my dog, he's a Cairn Terrier and showed the same hopeless reaction to the move as your "helper" dog but made all the noises of the "simple" dog for the 4 day trip!! it was an adventure for sure!

Alyssa said...

In the last slide Simple dog looks like some sort of stallion, like Black Beauty. Except less black... and a little more simple. Anyways... wonderful post :) More like this in a more timely manner would be preferable!

Unknown said...

Your dogs have such problems... :D

Erin Marie said...

After over 2000 comments on this post, I'm pretty sure you're not going to read this one, but I just wanted to let you know that your pictures in this post are the best yet - you captured the dogs perfectly.

I love your stuff. Big time.

Anonymous said...

I used to scorn those people who babytalk over dogs.

Then my family got one. Now if I see a dog in the street I'm like "NNNYYAAAWWWWWW CUTE!"

Figures.

ifcarlstonmaddeblogs said...

I've had to stop reading this post because I can't stop laughing in the library. I look like I'm having a seizure of some kind.

Good work Allie, I've been offered medical assistance

shirkie said...

I'm pretty sure I'M the simple dog. Usually yelling at Dora the Explorer (do you guys want to go on a picnic? EFF YOU DORA! Great!) while sitting in my Superman underpants and watching Spongebob when THAT'S on and eating Spider-Man Mac and Cheese is enough high-pitched eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeing for me.............. But now my new low-fat, low-sodium, no caffeine, high fiber, whole wheat diet = clean... all... the... things?........ So I need to find my own eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!

Anonymous said...

Bahahahahahahahaha! We had a dog like simple dog until recently, and she behaved *exactly* like this. Your stories and illustrations frequently make my day, and I would do any number of things to keep you telling them. *love*!

aarikaclaire said...

This is the best, most amazing post in the history of internet posts. Seriously.

Oxwivi said...

I laud your patience. If I were me, I'd have actually killed them like the thoughts you represented of them.

EngineerChic said...

We got those booties for our dog b/c he hated walking when it was cold. Getting him to try them on in the store & seeing how he walked ... we laughed til we cried. Better value for the money than all the movies I've seen in my whole life. But he has gotten used to them now. Can't say he LIKES them, but he wears the MuttLuks now.

Jeremy said...

This was a great story. Thanks for sharing.

Anonymous said...

My dog had to be moved from the USA to the UK. He feels your guys' pain.

Also, someone mentioned those soft paws things which you glue to your dogs claws... no. just no. File them to a soft point and keep them short! (kinds obvious and i bet you really know it...)
Or DAP. It's a pheremone thing which works wonders for stressed or insane dogs :P

Anonymous said...

Too funny! I'm moving with my puppy in two weeks and I will be very curious to see how she reacts now. She is definitely confused by the little bit of packing that has been done. Thank you for sharing, this should be interesting!

Anonymous said...

Puking makes food? I don't know why you're calling your dog "simple." I think he's a genius.

Anonymous said...

This is hilarious! Thanks! We moved to Asia and back with our dog. She wasn't traumatized by the experience. As long as mom is nearby, she does okay.

Missy C. said...

LOVED LOVED LOVED THIS!!!! The drawing are amazing and I have myself the best laugh in weeks. Thank you for sharing this.

studio lolo said...

haha, genius blog title!!!

I have worked with animals for 36 years and I recently drove from CA to RI with my neurotic dog and cat.

You nailed this!! Now I wish I had sprung for the Depends ;P

Marginalia said...

There's a lesson here. Fish should not have pets

Anonymous said...

Bitches be crazy.

Anonymous said...

Love it! This is going viral on Facebook. You realize that, don't you???

erin said...

thank you so much, this is genius, although my nose is still burning from the coffee that came spewing out of it.

Anonymous said...

I laughed so hard I cried, in no small part because this was our moving dog hotel experience exactly, except instead of high-pitched whining, she developed "intestinal distress" requiring her to go out every 15 minutes ALL. NIGHT. LONG. I have no choice but to believe that the sheer force of her anxiety liquidated her internal organs, because the volume of poo was truly extraordinary.

Jessica said...

I laughed so hard not only do my cheeks hurt but I have a headache!

M. Garrett Steele said...

I just wanted to tell you that this is really funny. Pretty much everything you've written is hilarious, but this is exceptional even for you. I wasn't going to comment at first; I get a little shyish on the Internets, and I know I'm not saying anything that hasn't been said, but you need to know how many peoples' lives are bettered by this.

Anonymous said...

Fantastic...the only link on HuffPo that really made me LOL. Puts "Marley and Me" to shame! Thank you!

karrie said...

i have not laughed so hard in a long time - thank you!

jess said...

I have been laughing in my cubicle here. It hurts. And I'm crying. But this was too amazing to stop reading!

Anonymous said...

The puking "I'm Magical" part lead my husband into hysterical laughs. Thanks Allie!

<3 your stuffs.

Unknown said...

The great thing about this is it is kind of slowly replacing language for me. I just send people links to images from this or a webcomic or whatever that expresses the appropriate feeling.

...wasn't sure how to say that in a webcomic. Its a work in progress:D

Erin Aviles said...

Allie, I just finished reading your entire blog. At first I was working my way backwards, but then somewhere in the middle of 2009 I decided to go to the oldest ones and work my way forwards. Eventually I met the ones I'd already read and I knew the fun was over. WHAT AM I SUPPOSED TO DO NOW??!!!
Also, since I was recently in 2009 and noticing that the number of comments you typically got on an entry were somewhere between 40 and 60, to see that you have over 2000 on this entry is pretty amazing. And also sad for me, because I'm pretty sure that means you'll never notice mine, and it was cool to read the entries where you seemed to be becoming such friends with your readers. I'm glad you're rich and famous now though, like you always wanted to be :) Dreams do come true!
Write again soon. I've spent like three weeks with you, I don't know what I'll do if I have to wait a month for the next entry now that I'm in real time.

Rhys said...

First time visitor here. My wife (the animal behaviourist) came downstairs cackling and claiming "you have to read this".

"I'll be the judge of that", I replied. Humour is best left uncompelled, I feel.

Turns out she was right. Your drawings of cheerfully baffled/emotionally crippled dogs are spot on, and your style is somewhere between Temple Grandin and Ralph Steadman*.

Well done.

(*That's a compliment, actually)

Anonymous said...

Thank you! Thank You! Thank You - I haven't laughed this hard in such a long time and I'm crying. Life with dogs is WONDERFUL and WACKY...I know, I have three of them. THe illustrations were the best.

Anonymous said...

I'm the helper Sister so I laughed until I cried. The dogs got worried, but that was too much effort so they went to sleep. I'm still laughing. Oh thank you! I needed it!

Anonymous said...

God, reading that near gave me an asthma attack from laughing so hard. I've never moved but when we take my dog camping she gets so worked up that she doesn't go #2 for three days. My cat acts like helper dog when she realizes that we're packing for a trip. The helplessness in her final look before we shut the door is enough to guilt trip me the whole vacation.
Thx for the post.

Alex said...

My cats are a total scream when I travel, and we were traveling 12 hours to move them from southern to northern California. We couldn't give them anything because they have certain health problems (which, sedatives are bad for things like the kidneys so if your cat already has kidney problems...)

Anyway. Long story short, aside from the yowling one of my cats busted out of his crate, jumped on my lap and leaned on the horn. He's huge, so I have no idea if the person in front of me even saw there was a driver.

sidster said...

Excellent. Well-written and creative. And funny! I'm a fan.

Anonymous said...

You are a genius and deserve to be world famous and very rich.
If that is what you want.

Lindsay_Bryce said...

I just stumbled upon this blog and as a fellow dog owning, recently cross country moving, "hardcore, legit, currently-unmedicated ADHD" lady, I wanted you to know this may be the best thing I ever read/saw. Please never stop the amazingness. Also, as a result of the whole ADHD/impulsive click constant stimulation of the internet thing I didn't get through your FAQ's/store so maybe I am behind the times of this suggestion BUT I am going to go ahead and let you know you must write a book....I imagine a darkinsh children's book to be the cut of your jib.

Riqua said...

I absolutely love your blog. I'm taking my time to savor it so I still haven't read it all, but I will... I will. This has to be my favorite one. Again I say, favorite so far.

Christian said...

My English Setter doesn't understand basic concepts like shadows. She ran around my house for an hour one evening chasing the shadow of a bat. She never knew that there was actually a bat in the sky. It's the same way for butterflies too...

AliKat8282 said...

this is the funniest thing i've ever read and you are my hero. the end.

gina said...

your snarky sense of humor is fantabulous

www.slappyintheface.com

Anonymous said...

some observations:

You begin your observations from a standpoint of considering your canines to be far below your, or the typical human's intelligence. You then spin you yarn in that mindset.
Since the premise is wrong, your analysis, though funny, is also off-the-mark.
Sadly, humans have to experience the end of life of a creature to accurately describe it. Dogs are intelligent and sensitive/observant enough to know what matters and where they fit into it all.
Interesting to note that you and your significant other seem to be always depicted with frowns. Note that the simple canines (your impression, not mine) are at least content and/or happy until you attempt to scold them. Know that dogs, and, ultimately, humans, don't respond well to scolding. The more effective approach is to positively reinforce good behavior. Judging by this simple depiction, it seems to me that a lot of important investment of time may have been lacking in the dog's experience, and this led them to be suspicious of the humans in their lives.

Anonymous said...

Hysterical post. But -- your dogs could probably benefits from taking them for daily structured walks. They don't perceive time at all, they perceive events and being trained to specific cues/inputs. You might do yourself a favor, especially with the simple one, if you establish "happy" routines. Like walking. I know plenty of people for whom this worked, dumb dog or not. Your dog forgot about the world with the squeaky toy because it's a happy input, provoking happy reaction from association. She won't remember the drive or the move since it's not something you repeat often. But she will remember that squeaky toy = fun. Think of dogs as a collection of "input - response" creatures - time is not something they understand. That's why they get super - excited when you get home even if you were gone for 10 minutes. They don't know any better. So if you train your dogs to recurrent positive things, you will have something to use in situations like this.

JMorg said...

You had my husband worried. I was laughing so hard and couldn't stop. Eeeeeeee. My simple dog is named Chico.

Clare said...

And I thought nothing could beat the spider blog... LOVED this one, have forwarded your link to everyone!!!

Matt said...

Great. Now I've finished reading every single one of your posts, and I have nothing more to read.

You fucking rock.

Shelley Stubbington said...

Brought tears to my eyes! Absolutely brilliant!!!

Unknown said...

Thanks for the best belly laugh I've had in weeks! And for the public service -- I have decided that my pup is going to be medicated into a coma-like stupor before our upcoming move... :0)

C Pohl said...

OMG...this is the funniest thing i have read in a long time...made my day...thank god i have never had to experience anything like this!

thanks for the laugh!

C

Anonymous said...

I dunno what it is about you, Allie, or what nefarious deal you made with whom .... but nobody, professional or amateur, virtual or IRL, makes me giggle 'till I literally cry the way you do.

Thanks?

And welcome to the PNW.

--Jen

Anonymous said...

omg, that is the funniest thing I've read all week. and I'm about to go on a 12 hour trip tomorrow with my two dogs... oh joy!

Gail Force said...

Love ur sense of humor. I already posted a link to my blog. Sorry if it's intrusive. Oh well, here it is again: http://joyploy.wordpress.com/

I can just relate to the trauma of moving. Culture shock is my new specialty.

LOVE UR FUNNY DRAWINGS!

Susan Callery said...

Oh, now that is very, very funny indeed.

Happy Thanksgobbling and check out my blog. It is rude and irreverent and I hope it gives you a lot of laughs.
http://laughinthefaceofpms.blogspot.com/

Unknown said...

Thank you for getting it just right. I am laughing and crying.

Anonymous said...

Fantastic.

Unknown said...

This... This was absolutely perfect. I laughed so much, thank you. :)

Otto Wright said...

Wow. There are tears in my eyes and I can't stop laughing. My wife and I have moved 5 times with our dogs and it never seemed as funny as this!

Anonymous said...

Brilliant! I almost died laughing at the image of the helper dog flopping over to the water bowl with those booties! love love it:)

3reddogs said...

Thanks to you I have a new appreciation for my Irish Setters. (I must say, though, that they adjusted pretty well when we moved, no flops or anything, but I think that's mostly because they got a backyard that was twice the size of their old one and they love to run like their hair's on fire.) Thanks also for more laughs than I've had in ages.

Anonymous said...

OMG DRAWINGS SOO CUTE

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