Questions Kids Ask: Are You Older than Whitney in Dog Years?

December 13, 2019 • Posted in blindness, Braille, careers/jobs for people who are blind, guide dogs, public speaking, questions kids ask, Seeing Eye dogs, visiting schools, Writing for Children by

I was busy shoving Whitney’s water dish and extra leash and a Braille copy of Safe & Sound into my backpack Wednesday morning when it dawned on me. The presentations we’d be doing at Ravinia and Braeside schools in Highland Park that afternoon would mark Whitney’s final school visits as a working Seeing Eye dog.

Whitney’s always known how to charm kids. (photo by Jamie Ceaser)

Do third-graders even know what the word “retirement” means? Should I tell the kids its Whitney’s last visit? That Whitney’s moving away? Could eight and nine-year olds possibly understand?

Whitney and I have visited dozens of classrooms this past year as part of the Educating Outside the Lines disability awareness program, and the thoughtful, caring questions third-graders came up with during the Q&A wowed me every time.

When we arrived, I ran the idea by their teachers. Would it be okay to forego most of the blindness stuff? Focus my talk on Whitney’s upcoming move instead? “Sure!” they shrugged. “If they want to know more about you being blind, they’ll ask about that, too.” The teachers were right, of course. This sampling of questions the kids asked tells all:

  • How did you get blind?
  • Why do you want Whitney to go to another person?
  • At the beginning of your talk you said all of Whitney’s brothers and sisters have names that start with ‘W’, so do all the dogs who start with ’W’ live in one house, and dogs that start with ‘B’ or another letter live in another house, and like that?
  • Is Whitney gonna have babies?
  • If you can’t see where you’re going, and there’s like, a wall in front of you, how does your dog tell you it’s there?
  • After Whitney retires, are you looking for a certain type of dog?
  • Do you have kids?
  • If the dogs are just puppies, how do the people at their school know that they can be trained?
  • How many years have you had a dog that helped you?
  • Do you really want Whitney to go to another person?
  • How long does it take to train a dog?
  • What will you do in-between the time you give up your dog and you get a new one?
  • What are the books that you wrote?
  • What if your new dog isn’t a good match, do you have to go back to school again?
  • What happens if a person is blind and they’re allergic to dogs?
  • So if dogs are color blind, is everything in black & white?
  • Are you older than Whitney in dog years?
  • How do you get on the plane to get your new dog if you don’t have Whitney to help you anymore?

That’s just it, I told the boy who asked that last question, admitting that I try not to think about it. “It’s going to be hard, but eyebrows up! She’s still here now!”

And with that, I thanked the kids for having us, and when I stood up, the beautiful ten-year-old Golden Retriever/Yellow Labrador Cross at my feet jumped up, shook herself off and stood patiently at my side. I lifted Whitney’s harness handle then, commanded, “Whitney, outside!” and dozens of eight and nine-year olds, all of them sitting criss-cross applesauce on the classroom floor, laughed and cheered as Whitney threaded me through them and out the door.

Whitney finished her final school visit on a high note, as did those third-graders. They wowed me again.

Sheila Welch On December 16, 2019 at 7:39 am

Hello Beth,

Thanks for another touching post about you and your wonderful helper, Whitney. I’ve retired from doing school visits also, and I miss those questions from the kids so much. My physical condition has reached the point where I can no longer count on the meds I take to control the symptoms. I’m exploring other options at this point.

So are you heading out to meet your next dog? I bet that’s exciting but also bitter-sweet. I’m glad that Whitney will be returning to her puppy-home where she’ll get all the love she deserves. I never met her in “person,” but reading about her has made me feel as though I’ve known her for as long time. I did meet Harper just before he was retired as a hero dog. I remember how cute he was, wagging his tail, wanting to be petted after you’d removed his harness and he knew it was okay.

I was lucky to have met you so many years ago when Hanni was your canine helper. We have a new dog also, having said good-bye to Tristan this past spring. He was 15 years old. Now we have a sweet mixed breed who is a great addition to our lives.

Best wishes for your continued success. You still “wow” me!

Sheila

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