The Musings Of An Opinionated Sod [Help Me Grow!]


If Dog Years Are Hard, Imagine What ‘Living With Campbell’ Years Must Be Like …
April 7, 2026, 6:20 am
Filed under: Bird, Bonnie, Cats, Dog, Home, Jill, Otis, Paula, Rosie, Sky

Welcome back. Did you eat lots of easter eggs?

Let’s be honest, even if you didn’t – as long as you had a long weekend, it was all good. Haha.

So to welcome you back I thought I’d write a wholesome post. No really. Maybe the sweetness of all the chocolate eggs I almost ate, got into my blood stream?

Anyway, a couple of days ago, it was a year since Bonnie came into our lives.

As people who have followed this blog for a while, you’ll know it was quite a big event for us because:

1 We had lost our beloved, very well-travelled, loveable-but-grumpy cat, Rosie the year before.

2 Jill had wanted a dog for as long as we had been together, but we’d resisted as we had moved countries so much and so often.

However, the loss of Rosie had shown just how much we missed having an animal in our house and lives.

Sure, Otis his budgie Sky … who, despite being very small, is louder [and grumpier] than a Brexit voter on twitter … however it wasn’t the same and it got to a point where the silence in the house was amplifying the loss of Rosie.

The thing was, having another cat felt wrong. I know that sounds mad, but it felt – at least to us – that doing that would be almost disrespectful towards Rosie. As if we were saying she could be replaced as quickly and easily as the average Hollywood marriage.

But I must admit I was still cautious about a dog. I’ve always loved them – and Jill, up until she met me, had always had them – but we live in a treehouse and so I felt we needed to give real consideration as to whether we could give it the life it deserved.

But three things – much to Jill and Otis’ delight – tipped me over to ‘yes’.

Firstly, I realized how good a dog would be for Otis.

Not just in having a ‘companion’ but in helping him manage/overcome some of the issues he was dealing with thanks to his dysgraphia.

Second was we found a breeder who specialized in dogs who were especially good at helping kids with issues of anxiety and confidence – not just in terms of parentage, but training.

And finally, was the fact I’d got healthy … so the idea of walking a pooch a lot was a positive rather than a negative.

So, with those 3 positives we took the plunge – which pleased Paula Bloodworth immensely after her 10+ years of lobbying for me to get a dog as she unashamedly prefers them to cats, hahaha – and then waited until the breeder informed us of a litter she felt contained puppies who could be very good for us.

And how right they were …

In a perfect world, we wanted a female dog, with a dark brown coat. And we got her. But more importantly, we wanted a dog who would be loving, gentle and – beyond the odd ‘zoomie’ calm for Otis. And we got that too.
In fact, from the moment she came into our house, Bonnie – named after a bourbon biscuit, as my tattoo celebrates – has been brilliant.

Sure, she ate all the zippers off cushions, has an unnatural love of socks and barks at her own reflection… but apart from those little quirks, she is a kind, loyal, caring dog.

And the impact she has had on Otis has been remarkable.

I won’t go into the details as that’s his story to own, but literally within weeks – the positive impact on Otis was unmistakable.

In many ways, she has changed his life and the trajectory of his life in immeasurable ways and I don’t say that with any sense of hyperbole whatsoever.

So Bonnie, thank you.

I cannot overstate how grateful we are to you for all you have done for us.

You’ve brought laughter, love and colour into our lives – especially to our brilliant boy Otis.

Seeing how you are together literally makes my heart smile.

Always by each others side, whether that’s for cuddles or mischief.

Even Rosie would approve … albeit through slightly pissed-off eyes.

So thanks for an epic first year and here’s to a shitload of them to come.

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Noise Means Life …

I’m back.

But I barely survived.

Part of that is because my trip was full-on.

The other part is having a puppy is even more full-on.

Seriously, it’s like having a baby all over again. Fortunately, we loved that period of our life so it’s not too bad … but bloody hell, it’s also pretty demanding.

A few months ago, I wrote about how people in agencies should be taught ‘the art of conflict management‘ … but now I think the other skill we should all be taught is puppy training.

If that doesn’t teach you how to be patient and calm when facing a barrage of noise and needs, nothing will.

That, or go work in China, hahaha.

That said, it is lovely having a pet in the house again. As I wrote before, while Rosie was a small cat, she filled the house with her presence and personality – and while we still have had Otis’, Sky, over these months, it hasn’t been quite the same.

But now, with Bonnie, the house has a new energy in it.

Sure, it’s slightly manic and lacking any degree of peace … but that’s a small price to pay to have life bubbling again. No wonder my Mum loved it when I came home to visit her. Not just because she was very happy to see me, but because my friends would come around and suddenly the place was a bustle of noise and laughter … a rewind to what daily life was like when Dad and I were around.

I get it. I just wish I could tell her that I do.

What’s interesting is we didn’t meet our dog until we picked her up … so we were totally reliant on the breeder being smart with her recommendation. Not because we were being picky about its looks … but because in addition to being a family pet, she has to be a trained support dog for Otis, hence temperament is key.

Thanks to the training she’s received from the breeder – and us – so far, it’s been good, but like Rosie it will definitely take some time until we find our own unique rhythm.

Finding the rhythm is a magical thing.

Some of it comes from ritual. Some from the environment. But most of it comes from the interactions you have and keep having together.

But when you find it, it’s special because it evolves into a sort-of invisible bridge where you can come together in the middle … with the knowledge to understand the unsaid. To interpret different sounds and signs.

It’s why that quote at the top of the page made such an impact on me when I read it.

A reminder that one of the most powerful ways to know how much someone has impacted you, is to look for those traits in others. Not so they become who someone was, but because they show you the best you can be.

So welcome Bonnie. Thank you for what you’ve given us already.

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I May Be The Fool, But At Least I’m Not A Gullible One …
April 1, 2025, 7:15 am
Filed under: April 1, Bird, Bonnie, Cats, Dog, Family, Home, Jill, Otis, Rosie, Sky

It’s April 1.

Normally on this day, I undertake an elaborate ‘April Fool’ post.

There’s been some good ones in the past.

The ‘Method Planning’ post.
The ‘Sniffer Dog, Retail Location Scout’ post.
The ‘AI Human Robot Focus Group’ post.
The ‘Poetry Drives Communication Effectiveness’ post.

… I say good, mainly because some people fell for them and then repeated the ‘methodology’ without realizing they were actually publicizing their own gullibility.

That said, there have been many that have just been shit … and I don’t mean that just because people saw through them like a greenhouse.

But today there is no April Fool … both because I’m trying to come to terms with the fact we’re in month 4 of 2025 already and because later this week, the joke is on me – because in just 5 days, we welcome a dog, Bonnie, into our lives and home.

A puppy is very different to a cat.

More energy.
More dependence.
More biting.
More noise.
More trouble.
More mess.

And yet, despite all that, I have to say I’m very much looking forward to the house having an additional member in the place.

While we have Sky – Otis’ bad-tempered budgie – the loss of Rosie, is still felt … despite the fact that she slept for a lot of her final years, and no one feels this more than Jill.

She used to love having Rosie sitting next to her as she worked.

Snoozing on a pillow next to her computer. Occasionally waking up to quietly judge her or her work or demand that Friskies be fed to her by hand whenever she chooses.

It was a nice interruption given she spent a lot of time on her own while I was at the office and Otis was at school.

And while she likes the momentary peace and quiet she gets from us being away – going from 1000 decibels of noise to 1 is extreme.

For her, the silence becomes loud-as-fuck with the time passing slower than a snail.

It can be pretty lonely and intimidating to be honest … and while she has never complained about it, I know that’s one of the reasons why she has always loved animals and why they’ve always been so important in her life.

So while Bonnie will, for all intents and purposes, be Otis’ pooch … she, along with Sky, will be Jill’s workday colleague and after 20+ years of waiting for a dog, I’ve never been so happy to be the April Fool.

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