Yellow or Golden?

From January 1997

At the end of May, we bought a puppy. By mid-June, I was freelyadmitting that the purchase was easily the stupidest thing we ever did. This dog has had every parasite imaginable, Now I understand the expression "sick as a dog." And babies and puppies in the same household are not a good mix. Both are very high maintenance and I doubt it's possible to get them on the same schedule. Talk about sleep deprivation!

The whole idea of adopting this particular puppy originated when I went to ask my neighbors to sign an architectural review form in order to have our swingset approved. Kelli, my next-door neighbor, commented that they would need such a form before they built a fence.

Since they have no children, I asked why they wanted a fence. She said they were going to adopt a puppy soon. I told her our dog had died the previous winter and that we were also thinking about getting a new dog. One thing led to another and we conjured up the grand idea of buying pups from the same litter. Ed and Kelli had their hearts set on a yellow labrador.

When I returned home and told Mike about the conversation he agreed that it was a great idea and said that he, too, had always wanted a yellow lab. I was a little disappointed because I'd always wanted a golden retriever but I figured I was outvoted so I said nothing.

Mike and I took the kids and spent a weekend visiting kennels. We called our friend the vet several times and asked all the important questions. We found an excellent breeder with an impressive list of references. This was to be a thoroughly researched, carefully considered purchase.

Memorial Day evening, we went with Ed and Kelli to pick our puppy. We told the children how important this choice was and how this dog would be a member of our family for a long time. We told them that if they had any concern. or questions to speak up. I briefly entertained the thought of suggesting that we look at golden retrievers but I figured that we were too far afield in this process to turn back.

He picked out an absolutely adorable puppy (did you ever notice how golden retrievers and yellow labs look very similar as pups?) and we considered names all the way home. That night, my five-year-old insisted on sleeping on the kitchen floor right next to "Seamus" so that he wouldn't miss his mother so much. The dog was quickly a part of the family.

Six weeks and several hundred dollars at Petsmart and the vet later, we went to visit friends who have a golden retriever. We were hoping that Seamus would enjoy playing with Barley. On the way home, I commented to my husband that Barley was really a beautiful dog.

"Yeah, "he replied, "I've always wanted a golden retriever."

"What?!" I exclaimed, "You said you wanted a yellow lab!"

"I know, I thought that the name for a dog like Barley was a ‘yellow labrador retriever’ You know, yellow-golden, golden, yellow. They're both retrievers."

"You've got to be kidding. You saw Seamus’ parents at the breeder. You knew he wasn't going to look like Barley."

"I know, " my dear husband replied, "but by that time we were really into the whole thing and I knew you wanted a yellow lab and I didn't want to disappoint you."

Ever so quietly, I said, "I have always, always wanted a golden retriever."

Seamus has grown on me. He is a very sweet dog and he's wonderful with the children. It has been great fun to watch him play with his "brother" next door. In all, for the stupidest thing I've ever done, it has turned out well.

Mike and I have learned quite lesson in communication. We are not going to be as likely to assume we know what the other is thinking. We are going to ask more questions and we are going to speak our minds a little more freely. And when we are old and looking for a dog for our retirement, when we have no babies to wake us, no teething toys lying around, and no diapers to change, we are going to get a golden retriever.

From Today's Office of Readings

From a homily by Saint Gregory of Nyssa, bishop
God can be found in man’s heart

In our human life bodily health is a good thing, but this blessing consists not merely in knowing the causes of good health but in actually enjoying it. If a man eulogizes good health and then eats food that has unhealthy effects, what good is his praise of health when he finds himself on a sickbed? Similarly, from the Lord’s saying: Blessed are the pure of heart, for they shall see God, we are to learn that blessedness does not lie in knowing something about God, but rather in possessing God within oneself.

I do not think these words mean that God will be seen face to face by the man who purifies the eye of his soul. Their sublime import is brought out more clearly perhaps in that other saying of the Lord’s: The kingdom of God is within you. This teaches us that the man who cleanses his heart of every created thing and every evil desire will see the image of the divine nature in the beauty of his own soul. I believe the lesson summed up by the Word in that short sentence was this: You men have within you a desire to behold the supreme good. Now when you are told that the majesty of God is exalted above the heavens, that his glory is inexpressible, his beauty indescribable, and his nature transcendent, do not despair because you cannot behold the object of your desire. If by a diligent life of virtue you wash away the film of dirt that covers your heart, then the divine beauty will shine forth in you.

Take a piece of iron as an illustration. Although it might have been black before, once the rust has been scraped off with a whetstone, it will begin to shine brilliantly and to reflect the rays of the sun. So it is with the interior man, which is what the Lord means by the heart. Once a man removes from his soul the coating of filth that has formed on it through his sinful neglect, he will regain his likeness to his Archetype, and be good. For what resembles the supreme Good is itself good. If he then looks into himself, he will see the vision he has longed for. This is the blessedness of the pure in heart: in seeing their own purity they see the divine Archetype mirrored in themselves.

Those who look at the sun in a mirror, even if they do not look directly at the sky, see its radiance in the reflection just as truly as do those who look directly at the sun’s orb. It is the same, says the Lord, with you. Even though you are unable to contemplate and see the inaccessible light, you will find what you seek within yourself, provided you return to the beauty and grace of that image which was originally placed in you. For God is purity; he is free from sin and a stranger to all evil. If this can be said of you, then God will surely be within you. If your mind is untainted by any evil, free from sin, and purified from all stain, then indeed are you blessed, because your sight is keen and clear. Once purified, you see things that others cannot see. When the mists of sin no longer cloud the eye of your soul, you see that blessed vision clearly in the peace and purity of your own heart. That vision is nothing else than the holiness, the purity, the simplicity and all the other glorious reflections of God’s nature, through which God himself is seen.