What my dog knows about life
“Hi, can I pet your dog?”
“Sure, if she lets you. She’s shy, and everything is on her terms.”
The guy crouched down, his hand extended. Kona paused a few feet away, assessing, stranger danger mode activated. Slowly, she stepped forward and stretched out her neck. The smallest of sniffs and an accidental nose boop. She backed away, signaling that was all she was willing to give.
“That’s the most anyone really gets from her,” I sigh.
“It’s ok, it was enough. Thanks, Kona!” they say, as we walk away from the stranger danger.
This is a common scenario. Kona catches the attention of almost everyone walking by… and very few get more than a tentative sniff.
I’ve been thinking a lot about what we tell people: “Everything is on her terms.” We say it lightly, but I don’t think we mean it lightly.

Kona doesn’t do things out of obligation. She is a typical shiba with no desire to please her owner. She is cat-like and does what she wants, for the most part, and not because we are laissez-faire pet parents. She moves when she’s ready, stops when she’s done, and engages only when it feels right — usually only if there’s something in it for her.
She doesn’t wake up wondering if her day will be meaningful or productive. She doesn’t scan a mental to-do list or stress about her calendar. She doesn’t have the Sunday Scaries. She gets out of bed every morning — thankfully, only after we do — stretches, and makes her way upstairs for her morning walk and breakfast. She doesn’t care what’s going on that day, she’s gotta meet her needs first: fresh air and food.
The other day, it was nearly 70 degrees F and sunny — in Denver, in February. We had to take advantage of the spring-like day, and we headed to Golden and walked along Clear Creek Trail. With Kona, of course.

The sun beamed on our faces, the creek babbled beside us, and we couldn’t get over how gorgeous of a day it was. Kona trotted along happily, occasionally stopping to investigate something deeply important that we could not see or smell. She set the pace. When she moved, we moved (just like that).
Everything is on her terms.
She eats when she wants to. If she isn’t in the mood for breakfast at breakfast time, she saves it for lunch.
She stops to smell the flowers, literally, even if we have somewhere to be. Satisfying her curiosity is worth the side quest, even if it’s not “useful”.

She finds sunny patches and sunbathes because she likes to. And she’ll move not because the sun wants her to move, but because she wants to move with the sun.
Kona doesn’t need to have a productive morning to deserve an afternoon walk. Joy isn’t a reward; it’s just part of being alive. There’s no internal ledger keeping track of whether she’s done enough to justify rest. She rests all the time, and purely because she wants to loaf around on the couch.

This way of being is deeply uncomfortable if you have a brain trained in systems, efficiency, and tradeoffs. I’m very good at making cases for things. Dogs do not care about your business case. They care about whether the sun is out and whether they get to be outside. Their tradeoffs involve napping on the bed away from their people vs. napping on the couch next to their people.
Kona also doesn’t care about progress. We weren’t going anywhere that day in Golden. There was no destination, no milestone, no desired outcome besides going on a walk. The wandering itself was the point. How much of our dissatisfaction comes from insisting that everything must be in service of forward motion, of achieving goals?
And Kona knows when enough is enough. When she’s tired, she stops. She plops herself on the ground to take a break. She listens to her body and acts accordingly. This isn’t the most convenient when we’re still a half mile away from the parking lot, but I let her rest for bit, cheerlead her while she pushes through, and carry her for small stretches if needed (ok, so Husband usually carries her, but I do sometimes).
Everything is on her terms. Maybe that’s the whole point.
Be more like Kona.
































