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DEARLES & DARLINGS LIFESTYLE SESSION

This family of expats brought their two adorable spaniels with them. They were keen for me to capture their everyday rituals which includes ample doggie snacks, cuddles, tea in bed (with the two girls of course) and walks in the park.

Dog-life in South Africa looks quite different than in the Netherlands. For one, we have large gardens where dogs can run and play all day. This in turn, unfortunately, means we don't have them trained for a life in Europe where they will need to be walked and engage with the myriad of strangers and their gorgeous canines.

These two, while wonderfully kind in all aspects of the word are also very vocal. Read: lots and lots of barking!

Which is why I included Mark Doty's sublime poem "little George:"

Little George
Mark Doty
1953 –
barks at whatever’s
not the world as he prefers to know it:
trash sacks, hand trucks, black hats, canes
and hoods, shovels, someone smoking a joint
beneath the Haitian Evangelicals’ overhang,
anyone—how dare they—walking a dog.
George barks, the tense white comma
of himself arced in alarm.
At home he floats
in the creaturely domestic: curled in the warm
triangle behind a sleeper’s knees,
wiggling on his back on the sofa, all jelly
and sighs, requesting/receiving a belly rub.
No worries. But outside the apartment’s
metal door, the unmanageable day assumes
its blurred and infinite disguises.
Best to bark.
No matter that he’s slightly larger
than a toaster; he proceeds as if he rules
a rectangle two blocks deep, bounded west
and east by Seventh Avenue and Union Square.
Whatever’s there is there by his consent,
and subject to the rebuke of his refusal
—though when he asserts his will
he trembles. If only he were not solely
responsible for raising outcry
at any premonition of trouble
on West 16th Street, or if, right out
on the pavement, he might lay down
the clanking armor of his bluster.

Some evening when he’s climbed the stairs
after our late walk, and rounds
the landing’s turn and turns his way
toward his steady sleep, I wish he might
be visited by a dream of the world as kind,
how any looming unknown might turn out
to hold—the April-green of an unsullied
tennis ball? Dear one, surely the future
can’t be entirely out to get us?
And if it is, barking won’t help much.

But no such luck, not yet.
He takes umbrage, this morning,
at a stone image serene in a neighbor’s garden,
and stiffens and fixes and sounds
his wild alarm: Damn you,
Buddha, get out of here, go away!

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