My adventures as an animal trainer are some of my best memories, but this journey started a long time before, when I first began pursuing my dream of working with animals by studying Veterinary Assisting at a magnet high school. This was my entry into the world of being an "animal person," and it changed the way I saw myself from that point on.
If you've never attended a school that specializes in animal professions, you may not know what it's like in that world. Let me give you a glimpse, as this sets the stage for all that comes after…
On the first day of 10th grade, I walked down the sidewalk and up the metal steps into the Veterinary Assisting portable, and my heart leaped the moment I entered. There were animals everywhere! Chickens roamed the circular tables, hopping over stacks of Animal Science books, while crates of bunnies, kittens, and puppies sat ajar against one wall, their inhabitants wandering the floor or sitting in students' laps. Stray animals students had rescued would spend their days in this portable, and their nights going home with students in exchange for volunteer hours. A rescued mouse might scurry across my open textbook one day, and a kitten could spend class in my lap the next. I spent an hour every day in total bliss, not taking even a moment of this chaotic paradise for granted. When my friends and I brought in some abandoned puppies we had found after school, things got even better, because we got to use class time to take them for walks and to try to find them homes from among our teachers and fellow students. When we weren't walking puppies, we learned about the habits and care needs of different breeds, and even practiced dog CPR. It was my first taste of life as a professional animal person, and I loved it.
When someone found a baby mouse with its eyes not yet open a few weeks later, our class voted on a name—Rufus—and then created a sign-up list to take him home overnight for volunteer hours. When my turn to watch Rufus came, I was excited. I took him home in his tiny cage, and set him up on a tall shelf in my room, closing my door to keep the cats out. I checked on him before settling in that night, then switched out the lights and crawled in to bed. In the middle of the night, I heard Rufus squeaking, but I was so exhausted that I decided to wait and see if it stopped before getting up to check on him. When he quieted down a moment later, I fell right back to sleep.
When I awoke in the morning and checked on Rufus, I realized in a panic that he wasn't there. He was very tiny, so I checked his cage several times to be sure he wasn't hiding in the bedding, but no... he was gone. How could that have happened? All the cage doors were still closed, and the little guy still had his eyes closed, so he couldn't have moved far. I called my mom in, and after several minutes of searching, we found his body on the ground behind the tall shelving unit. Somehow he had squeezed out of the cage and fallen! We pulled out the shelf, and I picked him up carefully. He was twitching slightly, but I didn't see him breathing. I was devastated. My classmates had trusted me to watch him for the night, and I had let him fall to his death. Desperate, I decided to try the only thing I knew that might save him: dog CPR. Yes, he was a mouse. But he had the same basic body shape as a dog, just much, much smaller. So I went to work, using the techniques I'd learned for very small dogs, gently rubbing his side with my fingers and giving short, gentle breaths into (or at, because he was so tiny!) his nose. Unfortunately, it didn't work; he was gone. I had to make the solemn drive to school that morning with a dead mouse in the seat next to me.
I checked in to my first class and then got permission to take poor Rufus to the vet portable. I trudged in with my stomach in a knot, and told my teacher what had happened. She was very understanding. My fellow students were not. When vet period came later that day, I had to tell them all what had happened, and some were very upset. Forgiveness came quickly, however, and some of my classmates decided we should memorialize Rufus's short life with a ceremony outside.
Everyone in class attended, though some took it more seriously than others. We buried Rufus beneath a palm tree outside the portable, and for a brief moment as I stood in a small cluster of my peers, listening to a eulogy for a stray mouse we had only had a couple days, I had the sudden realization that this crazy version of the world—the one where it wasn't strange to do CPR on a mouse and baby rodents had funerals—this crazy world was mine. Even if they did jokingly call me "Rufus killer" for a while, I had found my small tribe of fellow animal-lovers. This was where I belonged.
But I was soon going to experience a different side of the animal field, and it would forever change the way I saw things.
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