T๐๐t is t๐๐ s๐c๐n๐ w๐ ๐๐v๐ ๐๐๐n ๐ntici๐๐tin๐ ๐๐๐ t๐๐ ๐๐๐s๐n t๐๐t st๐๐tin๐. W๐ ๐isc๐v๐๐๐๐ Alm๐ tw๐ w๐๐ks in t๐๐ ๐๐st m๐kin๐ ๐n ๐tt๐m๐t t๐ ๐l๐๐, sc๐๐๐๐ ๐๐ ๐v๐๐๐ข๐๐๐๐ข, w๐๐๐๐๐s c๐๐๐๐ขin๐ ๐ l๐๐๐๐ t๐m๐๐ ๐n ๐๐๐ l๐๐. Sinc๐ t๐๐n, w๐โv๐ ๐๐t ๐๐๐n w๐๐kin๐ t๐ ๐๐t s๐ ๐๐๐, t๐๐ ๐l๐c๐ w๐โ๐๐ ๐๐๐๐l๐x๐๐.
I will ๐๐๐in ๐๐c๐m๐ntin๐ ๐nnm๐โs N๐w Li๐๐, ๐n๐ I will ๐๐ ๐is๐l๐๐ขin๐ ๐ข๐๐ ๐v๐๐๐ข ๐๐๐ข ๐๐w s๐๐โs ๐๐in๐.
T๐is ๐๐๐ ๐๐s ๐v๐๐๐ข๐๐๐๐ขโs c๐nsi๐๐๐๐ti๐n ๐s ๐ ๐๐s๐lt ๐๐ s๐๐ is ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐s, v๐๐i๐t๐ข, ๐n๐ sm๐๐t๐, ๐๐w๐v๐๐ m๐st si๐ni๐ic๐ntl๐ข ๐s ๐ ๐๐s๐lt ๐๐ s๐๐ is ๐n ๐n๐๐li๐v๐๐l๐ s๐๐viv๐๐.
T๐๐nk ๐ข๐u ๐ l๐t t๐ ๐ข๐๐๐ ๐๐l๐; wit๐in t๐๐ ๐๐๐ขs t๐ ๐๐t๐๐n, w๐โll ๐๐ ๐w๐itin๐ l๐๐ ๐๐tc๐m๐s t๐ ๐in๐ ๐๐t w๐๐t s๐๐t ๐๐ t๐m๐๐ s๐๐ ๐๐s. S๐๐ ๐๐s๐๐v๐s t๐is ๐n๐ ๐ l๐t ๐xt๐๐.
c๐๐m๐t๐๐๐๐๐๐ข will st๐๐t, s๐ ๐ll t๐๐ t๐in๐s is sw๐๐t, w๐๐t ๐n inc๐๐๐i๐l๐ w๐n๐๐๐๐๐l
B๐๐๐ti๐๐l st๐๐๐ข I ๐๐mi๐๐ ๐ข๐๐ ๐ l๐t ๐๐๐.
The pet Iโll never forget: Ella the puppy threw up on me, snubbed me and after 10 years decided to love me
Mum, Dad, my brother Michael: everyone in the family got more affection from our ridgeback-staffie cross. And guess whose bed she used to poo on…
I think the tone was set when Ella threw up over me on the way back from the Dogs Trust. She was three months old, rolling around on the back seat between me and my twin brother, Michael (weโd just turned seven), and wasnโt enjoying her first trip in a car. She could have been sick anywhere โ over the seat, over the floor โ but for some reason she decided to climb on to me first.
It was the start of a beautiful but strangely one-sided friendship. Ella, a ridgeback-staffie cross, was the perfect dog: playful, energetic, naughty and tolerant. She would let us poke and prod her without complaint, turn her ears inside-out or dress her up in T-shirts or the thick woollen poncho my Greek Cypriot grandma knitted her for the British winter. And she was endlessly loving, at least to the other members of the family. Me? Too often it was as if I didnโt exist. If Michael and I were sitting on the sofa, sheโd bound up to him. If I came home after a day out with my dad, he was the one sheโd jump at. If I tried to take her for a walk by myself, sheโd drag her feet and insist that I fetch my brother.
To add insult to injury, about once a year she would do a poo in the house. Not just anywhere, though: sheโd climb the stairs to my room and leave it in a neat pile on top of my bed.
I canโt pretend I wasnโt offended by Ellaโs attitude โ I loved her just as much as anyone. But it took me a while to realise that in her eyes we were both bitches fighting for our place in the pack. I read that dogs are 98.8% wolf, even yappy little chihuahuas. Ella was a definite she-wolf and my mother (she who opened the tin of dog food every night) was the undisputed alpha female. Ella could handle that fact, but she didnโt want to be the omega female. That was me.
Working out the reasons for Ellaโs lack of sisterhood, understanding that her indifference was atavistic and not just casual, didnโt make me any less jealous of my brother, who always took great pleasure in the fact that Ella seemed to prefer him. But I resigned myself to the situation. And then one day (happy ending, anyone?) everything changed. I must have been 16 or 17, weโd been away for a fortnight in France, and when we got back it was me she ran up to first, whining and twisting with pleasure at seeing me again. After that it was like all those years of competition had never happened. We were best friends for ever, or at least for the couple of years she had left. Ella finally loved me.
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