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laurajv ([personal profile] laurajv) wrote in [community profile] agonyaunt2023-08-25 02:13 am
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a weird one from Care & Feeding

Dear Care and Feeding,
Recently, my daughter gave me a hard time about coming to help for two weeks when I was going to be laid up with major surgery. When her husband arrived, my husband—who has cognitive issues—let the dog loose by accident and the dog bit my son-in-law (the dog had never seen him before) and there was one puncture (no stitches). Well, my daughter reported me and the dog to animal control, but she didn’t tell us until after she left town. I now feel I cannot trust her, and my husband and I feel she did this intentionally. Am I wrong to want to have nothing to do with her? The dog is a sweetheart and my constant companion.
—Disgusted Parent


Dear Disgusted Parent,
Is it crappy that your daughter reported you and the dog after she skipped town? Yes, it is—based on your version of the incident, which is all I have to go on, I think she should have talked things out with you first. However, I get the sense that your relationship with her was damaged long before this visit took place, because most adult children would’ve handled the situation differently—this feels like retaliation for more than just a frightened nip. Either way, you should contact her and try to figure out why she took such drastic action without warning. If you don’t receive a satisfactory answer, then I would have no problem with you choosing to love her from a distance for a while. Once you’ve cooled down, if this relationship is important to you, then you should take time to repair it, even if it means going to a family therapist together to figure out where all these negative emotions are coming from. I understand your anger, but holding onto it forever will only damage you in the long run. Speak to her when you’re ready, and hopefully cooler heads will prevail.
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[personal profile] dissectionist 2023-08-25 03:59 pm (UTC)(link)
I would agree in general, though I also think sometimes multiple failures happen at once. They may well have a system, which is LW under normal circumstances and that’s fine, and visitors are introduced in the presence of LW who can reassure the dog, and that’s fine, and that’s worked to this point. But then we have a situation where LW is out of commission in a way they usually aren’t, so LW took the step of restraining the dog because the usual protocols that work couldn’t occur, but then there was a failure due to the husband (who may well have been confused about why the dog was restrained, because that’s never been necessary before).

The problem is that there’s so few details in this letter, I can’t draw any solid conclusion; there’s just supposition. Maybe LW has a dangerous dog who has bitten people before. Maybe this was the first time. Maybe it only happened due to multiple failures and will never happen again. Maybe it is likely to happen again. Maybe it was serious enough to need to be checked out. Maybe it wasn’t a big deal and LW’s daughter did something resentful because she got forced into helping. I have no idea.