D-Dog, (Almost) A Hero
She rests her head on the edge of the bed. Her big, brown puppy eyes stare at her master.
He lies on the bed. Asleep. Or so it appears.
He lies on the bed. Asleep. Or so it appears.
It looks like he's sleeping, but the dog knows better. She knows this is a Diabetic Low. An Insulin Reaction. Even before he does.
I've had my share of Morning Lows and I've told some of those tales here. What hasn't been fully told is the story of Riley, our wannabe hero D-Dog. SuperG recently Tweeted that his own pup caught a Low before his CGM, and he also recently wrote about a D-Meetup in Minnesota where Molly's trained service dog Dixie caught his Low. This all reminds me of Riley's behavior when these situations surface. This 5-year old black lab can sense when something's wrong. Typically, she wants to jump up on the bed with me and play, in order to make everything better. My crazy, delusional hypoglycemia-induced rants and arm flailings don't seem to calm her down, they just provide more ammunition for her wanting to be a part of the action. It seems whenever my blood sugar is low, there Riley is - wanting to help. Granted, she has no known service or alert dog training. Only that desire to love, to recognize when something's off with her Daddy, and urge to do something to make it better.
Despite her love, wet nose, playful licking, or entrancing brown eyes, Riley is not quite a hero. While she can sense the Lows, it's true that I'll never rely on Riley to call 911. Or to inject me with glucagon. Or feed me honey, frosting, juice, or glucose tabs. Instead, I can hope that she'll continue sensing something is wrong and try to nudge or wake me into a BG test and treatment, before it gets too serious.
Most recently, this meant hovering nearby me went I went Low in the morning hours and my wife had already left for work. After Losing Time, she received a call from my office that I hadn't yet appeared or checked in and my calendar didn't indicate any meetings set for that time. She called; no answer. So, she came home. Stepping into the bedroom, the first thing she saw was Riley near the bed. With her nose resting on the edge and her eyes fixed on me - as I appeared sleeping. But when Suzi nudged me, she knew something was wrong and my sugar was Low. The dog knew, too, and went to her bed as Suzi navigated the Insulin Reaction and finally got it under control. While the dog knew well in advance, there wasn't much she could do to help boost my BG unless I took the step to do so myself...
Oh, Riley. Almost... (Enter the Bonnie Tyler music of Holding Out For A Hero...)
Ok. Back to reality. Though she's not quite there, Riley is Almost a Hero. Almost. She does her part and what she can. And that's reassuring. I'm sure the same can be said by any diabetic who has that kind of reassurance in a pet, particularly those who may be home alone. A pet-version of the CGM, you might say.
As mentioned before, some specific groups exist on this front - Heaven Scent Paws and Dogs for Diabetics that specifically address this topic and provide dogs and/or training for them on the D-recognition front. Good stuff, and worthwhile organizations to have. Our pets are lovable and can also serve as natural low-sugar detectors when we're asleep, if we don't have a CGM and don't happen to wake up by the time a reaction sneaks up on us.
We all need a hero. Even one that doesn't strive to be that way, but won't hesitate to love us heroicly and do whatever it takes to make sure we're happy and OK.
Comments
Not sure what he's trying to accomplish.
Other than that, having a pup is so great. I never thought I could love an animal so much, even if he does try to kill me.
I would say your guy is a hero. If he ever is acting like that...I would take that as a serious cue. He gets it, and that is a gift.
I'm so impressed with you...not many men could put Bo and Hope on their blog...classics moments! Thanks for the laugh. :)
Bo and Hope? well they have eternal love right? Or does one get possessed by the devil? No that's Marlena. Or was it Roman? Ugh! :)
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Parent of Teen Type 1 daughter, dx 2/3/10