Lea Lane

Lea Lane
Location
Florida, USA
Birthday
August 26
Title
freelance writer/editor
Bio
“I’ve discovered the secret of life,” Kay Thompson, the eccentric entertainer and “Eloise” author, once said. “A lot of hard work, a lot of sense of humor, a lot of joy and a lot of tra-la-la!” And that's been my life: As a travel writer for over 30 years, I've been around the block (more like around the world), and I write true stories about interesting people and places. I've lived an unconventional life in conventional trappings. Been a corporate VP, worked with foster kids, acted in an Indie ("Nurse 1"), was on Jeopardy!. I've been managing editor of a travel publication, written for the Times, and authored books. OS is my home, but I also blog on The Huffington Post, and I've contributed (mostly anonymously) to everything from encyclopedias to guidebooks. Married young, divorced late; married late, widowed early, I dated lots in-between -- and survived a scary illness. After being happily, peacefully solo for many years, I'm now happily married again. I founded and still edit www.sololady.com, a lifestyle Website for single women. I'm truly grateful for each precious day, each well-earned wrinkle, my family, my cat. Truth, laughter, friendship, late love. And this blog -- on this wonderful site!

MY RECENT POSTS

Lea Lane's Links

LINKS
Favorite THINGS posts
Favorite FUN posts
Favorite PEOPLE posts
Favorite PLACES posts
SEPTEMBER 12, 2008 9:34PM

The Seeing-Eye Man and the Blind Chihuahua

Rate: 8 Flag

 

I was visiting a donkey sanctuary in Aruba, and I saw a week-old donkey who couldn’t get up, and whose mother seemed disinterested. Chickens were pecking around in the dust, and a turquoise lizard scurried by.  A tall man in a black tee-shirt, carrying a white rat, came closer. I saw that the bundle he was carrying wasn’t a rodent, but a Chihuahua. It burrowed against his chest, in the crook of his arm.

Closer still, I saw that the dog was blind. No, more than that. Her eyes were missing, scooped out of her sockets like melon balls.

I asked him about the tiny dog. He said that he named her Lola and that she was rescued from Hurricane Katrina. He already had three Labs in his home north of Tampa, but his heart went out to this blinded little canine. His other dogs protected her, too.

The man didn’t know the story of how Lola lost her eyes. He didn’t want to think about it. She must have been through hell, but she seemed happy now. She didn’t tremble. In fact, she seemed serene. The man stroked her body, and talked softly to her.

Lola compensated for her loss of eyesight mainly by smell. The man said she could tell when his wife was cutting a piece of cake across the house. Lola liked cake.

The man let her down gently onto a porch area in the sanctuary where you can buy drinks and snacks. She felt her way along, sniffing, but staying near the man’s soft voice.

My first dog was a Chihuahua named Mijaca. She yapped and trembled and ran in circles and hardly stayed still. She wasn’t particularly likeable. When I was six she fell over at my feet and we buried her in a shoebox under a mango tree in the backyard of the bungalow in Miami Beach.

This dog was different. I stroked her, and she didn’t seem afraid. The man said that Lola sleeps next to him and she curls in just the right place so he doesn’t roll over her. She is old, so he isn’t leaving her behind, and he takes her everywhere, or doesn’t go. People allow this, and break the rules because they consider him a seeing-eye man, and because she is so little and has suffered so, and watching the man and the dog makes them both sad and happy.

The man’s wife, who was sipping sparkling water on the porch, looked past me, and I couldn’t tell how she felt. Perhaps a bit jealous, perhaps not.

This was such an unexpected, poignant situation. Back in the states, with all the hype and hypocrisy and arrogance and harshness of daily life, I couldn’t stop thinking of the devotion of that seeing-eye man in the black tee, cradling his white Chihuahua with gouged-out eyes in the donkey sanctuary in Aruba.

I just hope that the baby donkey makes it, too.

Your tags:

TIP:

Enter the amount, and click "Tip" to submit!
Recipient's email address:
Personal message (optional):

Your email address:

Comments

Type your comment below:
I know a troll who can sniff cake from across the house like that blind doggie. In case you hadn't hear, the troll is running for president or perhaps the front cover of OS. Not sure which.

Arrogance is such an evocative word.

(Rated)
What an endearing story! I rescued a mixed dog with a chihuahua head that seems transplanted onto a pug's body. I've flirted with the idea of buying him a therapy vest. So that I can shlep him to the occasional movie or trip to the grocery store. New York is still way behind Paris in canine accessibility.
Thanks for the tender story. The relationship says so much about the man, about real devotion.
I don't know about you, but the older I get the more I appreciate the dignity and honesty of animals. They connect us to the truest things of life. I just came back from that trip, and flew by the Tower of Light memorial, the beams of light that commemorate 9/11, and from the plane they looked like ghost towers, and I felt some comfort thinking of the love of the man and that little dog.
What a wonderful story. I love animals, and animal-lovers. :)
Yep, nice story. The special bonds that develop between people and animals, that cross-species connection, is sort of magical in some way.

Do you ever wonder about people who tell you, "I'm not an animal person"? I don't know what that means...
I think saying "I'm not an animal person" is kind of like saying "I'm a snob." There's a feeling of self-righteousness often. But I find the comment, and the lack of feeling, clueless.
Not only a wonderful story, a very well-written story. Thank you.
Lucky Little Lola.

I used to think that all Chihuahuas were nervous and yappy and then I met a friends dog and learned that there are 2 types of Chihuahua. The nervous ones, usually small, and calm ones, usually quite stout and much larger.
My husband and I were there that day with our dog that you are talking about. Why haven't you used our names? Please get back to me so we can make this story an honest one. You left out so much and didn't tell us you were writing a story. I found this quite by accident. my phone # is 352-514-8959