Archive for the ‘the boundary between worlds’ Category
Shiro in Manhatten
Posted in the boundary between worlds on 07/25/2010 05:21 pm by margot lasher
This is Shiro in the city, posing calmly next to a snowman in Washington Square Park. He wears a leash, heels, and follows all the city rules.
baby chicks & wild turkeys
Posted in the boundary between worlds on 07/23/2010 10:17 am by margot lasherMy son just got 4 baby chicks and he lets them roam around the yard while he’s watching them in the evening. We put Shiro in the house but he found an open door, and with the chicks wandering freely, Shiro came trotting into the yard and came right to me, ignoring the birds. He then lay down and seemed to be pretending not to see them (in psychology it’s called ‘denial’). But the chicks had no experience with predators and were basically without fear, so one of them flew right up to his head, close enough to his large mouth to be disappeared in an instant. Shiro raised his head and went into his ‘high alert’ mode. I froze. This is a dog who preys on wild turkeys, and whose idea of a walk is to go hunting. But he knew that he couldn’t eat the chickens. He didn’t touch the baby chick.
This is really being in two worlds. Can you imagine the restraint it took to leave that chick flying next to his head alone?
our dogs live in two different worlds
Posted in the boundary between worlds on 07/08/2010 07:48 am by margot lasherI’ve been working on the idea that dogs live in two different worlds, the human world of culture, rules, and human dangers, and the world of nature, with the connections of wild animals and the dangers of the wilderness. The amazing thing is that our dogs seem to be able to connect comfortably and easily to both worlds. They feel a sense of belonging in both worlds. They settle into the house, curling up on our bed at night, and then the next morning they race into the woods and are immediately aware and alive to everything. It’s an incredible ability to cross a complex boundary.
Our dogs and the boundary between worlds
Posted in the boundary between worlds on 06/13/2010 08:48 am by margot lasher
I’ve just returned from the Dowsers Convention in Lyndonville Vermont and met some wonderful dog-people. I’m going to repeat the description of my talk for those of you who weren’t there, and I hope whether you were there or not, or there spiritually but not bodily, you will be interested in this idea.
Our dogs live in and between two worlds, the world of nature and the world of human culture. They are masters at negotiating the boundary between these environments, staying present and centered in themselves in both worlds. As dowsers, we also cross the boundary between worlds. By watching our dogs, we can learn about seeing different realities, and staying true to our selves.
Doesn’t it sometimes amaze you that our dogs can be themselves, feel at home, feel like they belong, in both of these worlds? That they can go from the safety of the couch to the dangers of the wilderness (or the big city after dark) instantly?
