What the Dog Said
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About this ebook
Life is messy business, and that's just fine with humor columnist Joanne Brokaw. For almost a decade, she's been musing on life's ups, downs and inbetweens, taking readers on a journey filled with laughter, dog hair and even a few tears. From her heartwrenching chance encounter with a soldier in an airport to her confession as an office supply addict, from parenting advice to holiday observations penned by Bandit, her blogging Border Collie, Brokaw invites readers to join her again in the mundane (but often hilarious) mishaps and adventures of everyday life.
“Life is funny and packed with poignant life lessons. So is Joanne Brokaw’s What the Dog Said...Tickle that funny bone; pluck those heart strings; read this book!"
Kelsey Timmerman
Author of
Where Am I Wearing and Where Am I Eating
“Joanne has shared the best parts of her writing, told from the heart, offered without shame. Man, woman, or child, if you’re human, this book is for you.”
Yvonne DiVita
Founder
BlogPaws Online Pet Community
Joanne Brokaw
Author, humor columnist and award-winning freelance writer Joanne Brokaw spends her days dreaming of things she’d like to do but probably never will - like swimming with dolphins, cleaning the attic, and someday overcoming the trauma of elementary school picture day. She lives in Western NY with two dogs, a cat, some chickens, an army of dust bunnies and one very patient husband. For her complete biography, visit www.joannebrokaw.com.
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What the Dog Said - Joanne Brokaw
Introduction
Books I Never Wrote, and One I Did
I feel badly for those poor souls who, upon learning that I’m a writer, ask if I’ve ever been published and are disappointed when I tell them that yes, I’ve been published in dozens of magazine and newspapers across the US and Canada, and even in one publication on the other side of the world.
No book?
they ask hopefully.
No book,
I respond, and they quickly change the subject.
Most people, including writers, fall for the myth that if you haven’t published a book you’re not a real writer. So over the years, in an effort to bolster my own self-esteem as well as that of my friends and family, I’ve tried to write a book. It’s not as if I don’t have several (really great) book ideas in my head. I’m just not so sure anyone wants to read what I have to say.
Here are some of the ideas I’ve been working on over the last decade:
Answers to Questions
You Didn’t Know You Needed to Ask
Written with my Aunt Mary Ellen, who, under the influence of a single glass of beer, will give away her secret cache of beauty and life secrets in the interest of bettering humanity. Answers in the book will include:
A: If it floats in water, it’s fresh
A: Three weeks and don’t scratch the rash
A: NEVER! Most people don’t know it can kill you
We’re still debating whether to include the questions or hold them back for our next book. Really, what writer doesn’t want to sign a publishing deal for a series?
Stupid Is As Stupid Does: An Anthology
I got this idea for a collection of stories after leaving the movie theater one very cold and blustery winter night. I started my car, cranked up the heat, and stepped into the nearly empty parking lot to brush the snow off the windows.
As I heard the door slam behind me, I realized that I’d locked my keys in the car and left the engine running. On the passenger’s seat, mocking me from the car’s toasty warm interior, was my purse, which contained my cell phone and a spare door key (just in case I ever locked my keys in the car).
Around The World In 80 Bugs
I once went on a mission trip to Mexico to help with construction at a school for deaf children. Considering that I don’t speak Spanish, don’t know sign language, hate to fly and don’t know a hammer from a screwdriver, it was a pretty interesting trip.
I went a week without a hairdryer and endured bugs in my bed (and in the shower, on the tables, on the chairs, crawling on my dinner plate). Weeks later I was still picking concrete out of my hair.
My family and friends found my recap of the adventure so entertaining they thought it would be fun to plop me down in other foreign countries, like Canada or Las Vegas, to see what happens.
It’s Nothing a Little Zoloft Can’t Fix
Wit, wisdom and encouragement for people who suffer from depression, anxiety and other slight mental imbalances.
This book would include practical advice on how to survive a panic attack, ways to convince the emergency room doctor that, despite what his tests and machines say, you really are dying, tips for choosing the best pajamas to wear during a major depressive hibernation and excuses you can use to avoid leaving the house for at least three months.
I’ve got more where those came from. I even contemplated writing a book containing only summaries of all the books I never wrote. I figured that at least when people ask if I’ve ever been published, I’d be able to finally say, Yes,
without embarrassment.
But then I was going through piles of old columns and someone casually said, You’ve got enough material here for a book.
What? A book? I’ve already written a book? Written it piece by piece, essay by essay, column by column, year by year?
Apparently so. And most of it is stuff people actually wanted to read, stuff editors actually paid me to write.
The columns and essays collected here have been printed in dozens of magazines and newspapers across a span of several years. Some of the pieces are funny, some are thoughtful, some are just silly and a few were penned by my dog, Bandit. (That’s right. My dog is a writer, too.)
I chose my favorites, the ones that still make me laugh or get a little misty-eyed after all of these years. The only new piece in the collection, What the Dog Said,
ended up being the book’s title.
While not everything in this book deals with dogs, everything I’ve written for almost 15 years has in some way been influenced by incessant barking, dog hair in my tea or paw prints on my keyboard. I am who I am because of dogs - those barking in the room right now and those romping around on God’s Farm in the Sky.
So, without further ado, I present What the Dog Said. I hope you laugh. You may shed a tear or two. Either way, I hope you enjoy reading these pieces as much as I enjoyed writing them.
1
12 Ways To Know You’re Ready To Get A Puppy
A friend told me her husband and son were trying to convince her to get a puppy.
I’m trying to be positive about the whole thing,
she explained as she asked her dog-owning friends for advice.
Being the owner of two incredibly intelligent and well-behaved dogs, I was more than happy to share my own thoughts on how to know if you’re ready to get a puppy.
1) Volunteer to pick up the neighbor dog’s poop for a week. If at the end of seven days the task seems like a treasure hunt instead of a chore, you might be ready to get a puppy.
2) Pour a measuring cup full of dirt onto your freshly laundered bed sheets. If after sleeping on them for several days you find you enjoy the feeling of crunchy linens because it reminds you of your last vacation at the beach, you might be ready to get a puppy.
3) Have your spouse take one shoe from every pair of shoes you own and hide them somewhere in your home. If you can still get to work on time every day, wearing shoes that match, you might be ready to get a puppy.
4) Get up at 5 a.m. every morning and walk around