Where Are My Boys

Poodles have hair, not fur. Like most hair, it grows in a certain direction. Dogs generally like to be pet in the direction their coat grows, not against it.

My son didn’t notice for a long time.

When Emmet first came home, my son was eleven. Emmet is a service dog, trained specifically for children with epilepsy. He was a year and a half, already trained, already knowing his job. He knew how to lay across a person’s lap with his full weight, the way a weighted blanket settles. He knew “over” and “lap” and how to read a room. He was ready.

My son wasn’t sure what to do with him.

The petting was the first sign. He would reach for whatever part of Emmet happened to be closest and move his hand in a way that looked like petting without quite being it. He wasn’t feeling Emmet. He was mimicking the shape of what petting looks like. And he’d go against the grain without noticing, his hand moving in whatever direction felt natural rather than the direction Emmet’s hair ran.

They would be in the same space, close enough to touch. But there was something between them. An invisible distance that kept the contact from becoming connection.

Emmet is trained to comfort. His weight across your lap is supposed to mean something, to regulate, to settle. But when he’d do “over” and lay across my son, I don’t think my son felt it. The command worked. The dog complied. The comfort didn’t arrive.

We kept at it. We practiced in the kitchen, the three of us, Emmet running through his commands while my son learned to offer the right reward. A treat, and then his hand in the places Emmet actually likes. Under his chin. Along his neck. Near his ears. The top of his back.

And then one day Emmet leaned in.

My son was petting him the right way, in the right place, and Emmet pressed into his hand the way dogs do when they want more of something.

“See how he’s leaning in to you? That means he likes it.”

My son noticed. I could see him register it. The idea that the dog had a response, that something he was doing was causing something in return. It was a small thing. But it was the first time the contact went both ways.

Viktor joined the family a few years ago, ten weeks old and completely feral. My son helped name him. We asked for ideas and he said “Victory Royale,” the winning moment in Fortnite, which is how we landed on Viktor. The name fit. He has been chaos ever since.

He’d rocket into whatever room my son was in and be immediately in his face, all energy and no concept of personal space. My son didn’t know how to play with dogs yet, not really. He’d try to do what he’d seen me do, but the timing was off and Viktor was relentless. It was too much.

Viktor also, on more than one occasion, relieved himself on my son’s bed. This did not help.

But time passed. Viktor calmed down, somewhat. My son got older. And slowly, something started to change.

He started throwing the ball for Viktor. He learned that Emmet likes it when someone holds a nylabone while he chews, and he started doing that. Small things. Quiet things. Things I noticed without saying anything.

Then the dogs started showing up in his room. I’d go check on my goddaughter across the hall and hear him from his doorway, pleased about something. The dogs had migrated to his bed. He’d send me pictures from the couch, one or both of them pressed against him, settled, staying.

Now when he comes home, he wants what I get.

He comes through the door and looks around. “Where are my puppies? Where are my boys?”

The dogs come to me first. They usually do. But I redirect them, and eventually they split. One finds him, one stays with me. He bends down toward whichever one comes his way. He doesn’t get on the floor the way I do, not yet. But he bends. He reaches. He waits for them to come to him.

And they do.

It took four years. It didn’t look like bonding for most of them. It looked like proximity without connection, effort without payoff, a boy and a dog in the same room who hadn’t figured out what they were to each other yet.

But they got there.

What Emmet Did On Summer Vacation

Earlier this summer, we took a family trip back to Colorado.

Colorado has always been a special place for our family. My wife and I met there, were married there, and our son was born there. Even though we left when he was four, my son has maintained a strong connection to the state, especially its sports teams. His favorite teams are all Colorado teams.

The week we visited, two things were happening. First, the NHL Stanley Cup Finals were happening in Denver between my son’s favorite Colorado Avalanche and my favorite Tampa Bay Lightning. There was also a Colorado Rockies baseball game later in the week.

When we planned the trip, we wanted to attend both games. These would be our service dog Emmet’s first sporting events, but this was also our first trip flying with him.

Flying with Emmet was pretty straightforward. There was paperwork to fill out, and we talked to an airline representative when we booked the tickets, who secured us seats in the bulkhead. On some airplanes, the bulkhead usually has extra leg room, so I expected Emmet to be able to lay down comfortably during the flight. However, on the plane we were on, the bulkhead was just the first row of economy seats behind the first-class seats. There wasn’t much extra space. On the trip out to Colorado, my wife was already there, so it was just my son and me on the plane, which meant we only had two of the three seats in the row. Fortunately, the woman who occupied the third seat was extremely friendly and didn’t mind when Emmet, after much fidgeting and shuffling, finally decided to lay down under our legs.

When we landed in Denver, we were excited to get off the plane. Since the flight was a few hours long, our first stop was the pet relief area. The one in Philadelphia was tucked in a corner, fake grass with a fake fire hydrant but well maintained. The pet relief area in Denver was a different story. It was a small room that reeked of ammonia and urine. Emmet started pulling towards the door as soon as we entered the room, and, no matter how hard I tried to encourage him, he wouldn’t pee. I didn’t blame him. Fortunately, I could take him outside once we reached the baggage claim area.

The hockey game was next on the calendar. I contacted the arena to ask for guidance on bringing a service dog, and the staff was very helpful. Tickets were difficult to find, and there were no accessible seats available, but the box office suggested that we check the day of the game to see if any opened up. They didn’t.

When we got to our seats high up in the arena, we were in the middle of the row, and there was very little room between our seats and those in front of us. Emmet spent the first two periods on my lap. If you’ve never had a 60-pound dog sit and squirm on your lap for 2 hours, I don’t recommend it. But for the first two periods, besides shifting to get comfortable, he seemed to enjoy the experience, watching the players and puck move back and forth on the ice.

By the third period, though, he was growing more uncomfortable, and the arena was getting louder as the Avalanche pulled away in the score. My wife took him outside for the rest of the game, and he was much happier. So were my bruised legs. Lesson learned.

The baseball game was a different story. Emmet did great walking through the crowded stadium. We were able to secure accessible seats, which, at a baseball stadium, are generally roped-off sections at the concourse level behind the lower sections. We had folding chairs, shade, and enough space for him to stretch out comfortably and take in the game. The noise level, especially since it was outside, was much more tolerable for him, as well. Before we left, we swung by the team store and let him look at the pet section, where he selected a squeaky plush baseball bat, which he carried to the register himself.

Other than another extended delay, the return flight was much more manageable. My wife was traveling with us, so we had the entire bulkhead row for Emmet to stretch across and lay down. He settled in much easier, too, as did I, since I knew what to expect. I relaxed and watched a movie, occasionally reaching my hand down to comfort Emmet, and he fought sleep. We were all exhausted, both from the flight and from the activity-packed trip.

After we landed, we grabbed our bags, found the car, and headed home. We pulled into the driveway and unpacked the car. We left the bags in the kitchen, opening them only to retrieve our toothbrushes. We made it upstairs, washed up, changed into our pajamas, and fell into our beds. Emmet gave one last stretch and jumped into my son’s bed with him, laid his head down, and took a big, deep breath. As much of a fantastic trip as it was, full of amazing and first-time experiences, it was good to be home.

Meeting Emmet

During the first few weeks of January, we traveled to Xenia, Ohio, to meet our son’s service dog, Emmet. It was a meeting more than two years in the making.

This is the second video documenting that trip where we finally meet our new family member and share some of the training we went through to be able to bring him home. Enjoy!

If you would like more information on service and service dogs for children, please check out 4 Paws For Ability.

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