Day of the dog
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There is an enormous backyard somewhere. It is full of dogs. Every dog has his day. They are all seeking theirs. Actually, they are all chasing their tails, convinced that the day they have their tails between their teeth, will be theirs.
Dogs of all ages strain themselves. Some are more determined than others. Some are really not into it. They are just doing it because everyone else is. Many have been doing it for years and think they can’t stop now. In any case, everyone is going round and round.
One day, one of them, after having flexed his body to degrees unimaginable, gets to his tail. As he holds on to it with his teeth, all others around him stop. Soon, there is a crowd around him. Some dogs bark their appreciation. Some growl in envy.
Some come to him to seek his secrets. But the dog is too busy holding on to his tail so he can’t share his way of doing it with anyone. Eventually, they all go back to chasing their own tails.
The dog holds on to his own tail. He is aware of the hundreds of dogs all around him, looking at him in awe and wonder. They consider him unique. He has accomplished what they all have always dreamt of.
The dog is pleased, but a part of him is full of questions. He had always thought that this was his day. Maybe it is. But how does that change things? What is he to do now? The other dogs see in him a content and happy being. He sees nothing. There is only emptiness ahead of him. An eternity standing right there, with his tail between his teeth.
It is then that a smell comes to him from somewhere outside the backyard. He can’t see beyond the high fence. But as the smell assaults his nostrils, he is reminded of the days when he was a pup. Back when he used to bound about the garbage dump with his brothers and sisters, sniffing for good, wholesome leftovers.
The dog’s mouth waters. The tail almost slips away from between his teeth. But he can’t let go of it. He has spent too much time on it. His image… his very life hangs on it. He begins to fear the smell. He convinces himself to hate it. He tells himself it is something evil, sent to take away his life from him, leaving him insecure and unsafe. Without his tail, he would be right back where he started. He has his day and he is not going to let go of it.
When the gentle wind brings a wave of smell to him again, he bites hard into his tail. It bleeds and he opens his mouth a little to let out a whimper. The tail swings free. He snaps at it several times in vain, but he is standing straight now and can’t get back to it.
He goes round and round for a while, unwilling to believe that he has lost it. Then he notices that he looks like everyone else now. Fear and a sense of loss come crashing down upon him and he howls out loud, disconsolate.
A few other dogs stop and come to him to share his grief. But as before, they don’t stay long and return to their own tails.
Then the smell comes again and a part of him feels happy. He seeks refuge in his childhood and the memories flood his mind. He doesn’t have the energy to fight them this time.
Eventually he opens his eyes, and gets up on his feet. He finds his tail wagging and feels odd. He doesn’t remember the last time this happened. Turning to face the source of the smell, he takes slow, leisurely steps. Then he breaks into a trot. The other dogs appear creatures from a bizarre dream now. He looks at them in mild amusement as he passes them. None of them notice him.
He follows the smell out of the backyard, far away and beyond the sea of dogs. As the smell grows stronger, his trot dissolves into a run and he bounds forward like the wind.
At long last, he comes across a garbage dump. There is a puppy running around it on its little legs. The dog feels happy to find the puppy’s glee reflected in himself. His tail wags harder. He runs across to the puppy and barks to him in happiness. The puppy answers with his small bark.
The dog takes the puppy around the dump. He teaches him to find less steep slopes which make it easier to climb up. Then he teaches the puppy to leap. He tells him how to use his hind legs to propel himself forward and upward. The puppy tries and fails many times. The dog points out the mistakes each time and eggs him on.
Soon, the puppy makes it to the top of the mound and retrieves a slice of pizza. It is still soft and untouched. The puppy starts eating, hoping that the dog will help himself to it. But the dog doesn’t. He just waits for the puppy to finish.
Then they walk, both of them, side by side. They are happy, and it is unclear which one is following the other; or whether they are following anything at all.
Posted on Monday, September 3rd, 2007 at 1:17 am and filed under stories.
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Hmmm… this sounds strangely familiar
Does it have anything to do with what you’ve been talking about the past few days?
So now I dont know whether to be sad that even a dog has a pizza, and I dont or to be happy to note that in this strange bit you atleast agree that you are a dog…..
Ashwin: One thing leads to another.
Smita: Don’t you love dogs?
Don’t you think its more fun chasing some one else’s tail than your own?
Ankesh: Tails should be kept where they belong. If you give them more time then they deserve, they start vying for the place your head presently occupies.
I tend to think that the dog follows the puppy more than the puppy, the dog. The dog has tasted the pinnacle of decadence, he has already bit his tail. Won’t he constantly be attracted to this goal (a belief that there IS a goal) of his youth? Doesn’t he need the constant image of innocence before him, to reassure him?
The pup, on the other hand, if he is realistic, will have to grow up to be like the other dogs: chasing its own tail. It is an illusory but necessary goal which gives the pup essential life-experience, lest he were to become old before he reached his adulthood.
Nicely put Me. Someone told me perhaps the story needs more explanation. But I find it better when the story speaks to the reader on its own.
I agree the dog is following the pup. But I would also say that the tail is immaterial. Its always there, but undeserving of total and complete attention. I hope the dog will tell the pup that he found greater fulfillment in teaching it than in all his years of the chase.
[…] Day of the dog “Soon, the puppy makes it to the top of the mound and retrieves a slice of pizza. It is still soft and untouched. The puppy starts eating, hoping that the dog will help himself to it. But the dog doesn’t. He just waits for the puppy to finish.” […]
hmmm.
well written. but trying to analyse it takes away the very point of it. the moral of any story, if there is one, when pointed out, seems to defeat its very purpose.
stories, are best left uniterpreted and unanalysed.
but that’s just my opinion.
whaddayathink?
Ender: The story remains untouched. What happens in the comments stays in the comments.
Welcome BTW!
Got here from TS’s blog.Loved the way you wrote this.
I just wanted to add–If the dog is a he-dog, he probably will soon forget about the puppy and start chasing a bitch.
If the dog is a bitch, then she feeds the pups for a while and after a few days walks away.
Each dog to its own.
Ps: Hmmm… And as far as bloggers go, each to his own too.
Welcome!
Brilliant piece sir! simple and as effective as can be
write on!
[…] Vijayendra Mohanty presents a short-short story about a dog who finally catches his own tail, “Day of the Dog.” […]
Hi Vijendra,
The pain does not comprise the efforts involved in catching the tail; it’s the demand to stay on with the hard-earned tail between the teeth. I understand this much philosophically; but then it’s essentially a funny account. Panchatantra retold!
Thanks.
Nanda
http://ramblingnanda.blogspot.com