The Nature of Resilience

in #culture4 months ago

Our plans changed slightly tonight. The "plan" was to be in our pyjamas the whole day (mostly accomplished) and have a friend of ours come over to spend the night, enjoying leftover Christmas food, drinking some wine and having a sauna. We did just that, but my friend couldn't stay, because something quite incredible happened - they found his dog.

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He has a large rescue dog that was mistreated in another country. It might be a mix, but it has a fair amount of Moscow Watchdog, so it looks very much like a St Bernard. Luckily. It was staying with a friend of his for a little while, but something spooked her when they were at the cottage in an unfamiliar area, and she took of into the forest, and didn't return. She has done this once before with my friend, but came back to his house a couple days later.

For a very big dog, she is more timid than a mouse, which speaks to her treatment when she was young. Essentially, she has PTSD, and at times something triggers the memory and she goes into flight mode. However, we have had some pretty cold weather here and for the first few days after she disappeared, the weather was down to -22C (-7F), and hasn't been above freezing very much since. That was almost a month ago.

While it is incredible that she survived that long in the forest, mostly based on the kindness of strangers in the area who would leave food out for her, the more amazing thing was in how she was caught. Essentially, a group of women in the community who track and trap lost dogs, have spent the last two weeks roaming the forests and then last week, setting a trap for her. It is a large game cage, baited with a piece of deer. They also had a game camera setup so that they could see if the dog had triggered the trap.

They say that usually, a dog will only ever be trapped once by this kind of trap, because it is quite traumatic to be caged like that, especially after a month out in the forest free. However, she wasn't in there long, even though she triggered the trap at 3am and my friend had her home again by 9, with her a bit thin, and with a slightly ragged tail, but overall, in great condition. She was also acting like normal, like nothing had happened.

My friend is obviously relieved, but he too found it quite incredible how this timid dog, was able to survive for a month in the forest. Not only that, he also found it amazing that there was this group of women in the community that come together in these kinds of circumstances and do so much work to return dogs to their owners. And they expect nothing in return - which is very rare these days.

But while all this is amazing to me, what It also got me thinking about was how resilience, which is such a valuable skill, can also be just nature doing its thing. Almost any other type of dog breed would have frozen to death under the same conditions, but this one managed in relative comfort. So, how much of our own resilience is nature, and how much is nurture?

A lot of people these days seemingly are struggling with mental problems, based on their experiences. We often hear about PTSD in soldiers who have seen combat, but now it is more commonly being used for people who have some kind of other trauma, from childhood, or social trauma of being teased and the like. However, what I have questioned, is whether this kind of trauma has always existed, but we are less capable and skilled at dealing with it, so the impact it has now is greater.

It is hard to say what is "adequate trauma", because to the individual it all feels serious and important. Yet to survive this world, we have to be capable of dealing with some level of hardship - we have to have some kind of resistance and resilience. If we don't build up a tolerance to hardship and stressors, it is like a person who has never eaten spicy food, biting down on a habanero chili - it is going to burn - And not in a good way.

Like my friend's dog, we are likely skilled in different ways by nature, making dealing with some aspects of life easier for some of us, than it is for others. However, unlike my friend's dog, we also have the ability to critically think and prepare ourselves, improve ourselves in ways that overcome our nature. For instance, a skilled woodsman would be able to survive in the depth of Finnish winter, unless they are unprepared. When it is -22, no one is going to last long being naked.

We are animals, but we aren't dogs. Even though the circumstances we find ourselves in might not be what we have chosen, we can choose to some degree how we predict, prepare and act. Sometimes times are good and we have a warm home with plenty of food in the fridge, sometimes, that is not the case at all. What is also good to remember is that being part of a community goes a long way to mitigating risks and providing support when we need it, but being part of a community also comes with the responsibility to add support into the community when others need it too.

I think a lot of the issues in society today is because people feel entitled to receive support, but not the obligation to provide support. It isn't about give and take, it is just take and expect others to give. It was refreshing for me to hear the stories of the trappers who took control of the rescue operation. But also of the family (Russian speakers) who put a bowl of food out for the dog, and took my friend (a stranger to them) in during the evenings for hours at a time, offering tea and conversation while they waited, hoping she would came by for a feed, as she had done on a couple other nights. For weeks.

A little of my faith in humanity has been restored.

Even though most of us are lost in the forest. Unprepared.

Taraz
[ Gen1: Hive ]

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We have never had a situation like that with our rescue dog, but it has come quite close before. I remember one time she got loose in Columbus, OH which is a pretty big city and I was terrified we were going to lose her. It's not that I didn't think she would come back, but like you said, so much can happen in that time between she leaves and if/when they come back. I'm glad your friend got their dog back.

I have never lost an animal like that before, even though our dogs and cats were mostly roaming around when I was a kid. It must be stressful.

It's bad because your mind immediately goes to them getting hit by a car or something. It's a pain like I have never felt before. Sometimes the imagining what could happen is worse than what actually happens.

It might be a mix, but it has a fair amount of Moscow Watchdog

I read on Wikipedia, that there have been Moscow Watchdogs in Hungary since 1986, and that in 2013, there were already 500 dogs of this breed. But I don't think that I have seen any of those.
Hungarians have many guard dogs, and they usually bark a lot and seem very aggressive.
But they have also very nice shepherd dogs like the Puli or the Mudi. [My wife rescued last summer a very affectionate female dog that is mostly Mudi]


A little of my faith in humanity has been restored.

I think I have never lost faith in humanity. And I hope I will never do.

Those Puli dogs are funny to see. Their hair is crazy.

I think I have never lost faith in humanity. And I hope I will never do.

I think I don't see much humanity these days. I should get out more.

However, what I have questioned, is whether this kind of trauma has always existed, but we are less capable and skilled at dealing with it, so the impact it has now is greater.

I think a lot of people realize they are in abuse after 30s mostly. I realized at the end of 20s where I was exposed to world outside. I noticed that some of the really traumatic events eventually start playing in head and stop you from making even simple decisions. Only way to deal with it is bow out of abuse you take and move to difference place also impact never goes away unless abuser dies, or you die. Mental manipulation is harder to heal, physical wounds heal and our mind forgets about event.

Mental manipulation is harder to heal, physical wounds heal and our mind forgets about event.

I think this is actually one of the problems in the world today. I grew up where it was possible to spank a child and I got spanked. No normal parent hurts a child when spanking. However, that is n longer a tool to use for discipline, so psychological manipulation is applied instead, by people who don't have the training to do it well. A smack on the wrist or butt with a sting that last moments, or a psychological scar that will last a lifetime. Which is better? And, the parents who would actually hit and hurt their children, still do so.

HAPPY HOLIDAYS… How nice for the little dog and his friend. Many say that man's best friend is “the dog”, others argue that it's “the horse”, who is right? If an animal is well treated, fed and given true affection, it will be a faithful little animal -it happened to me many times in my homeland-. I did spend literally “all day in bed, watching some movies, listening to seasonal music”; also eating last night's leftovers, heh, heh, heh. Matthew has been stable, and his tiredness has kept him in his room longer.

How nice for the little dog and his friend.

"little" weighs more than my wife! :D

Glad that Matthew is somewhat on the mend. Must be a relief.

Did you watch anything good?

I have just finished watching The Legacy of Osiris (2026), the second time I have managed to watch it in its entirety. I love fictional, futuristic films. During the day, I watched “A Grandfather for Christmas” with Matthew, which I couldn't miss “The Grinch”. And while reading I listened to “Pachelbel Canon” and “Ennio Morricone, Il était une fois dans l'ouest” and some “Leo Rojas—Der einsame Hirte”.

I understand what a great animal “that little dog” is, it is simply a subtle way of being empathetic.

I did not had many dogs, but once a cat that I had found where I moved and was waiting in front of the door, on a busy street.

I wonder if it is good luck to find a cat, or bad luck? :D

It it is your cat, it is good luck!

We are animals, but we aren't dogs.

:)

I was expecting "speak for yourself!" ;D

It is wonderful that your friend was able to find his dog. The people responsible for the dog's survival and return are heroes. I think without one of them doing what they did, the dog might have been in a worse state. I hope they are more careful with the dog in the future. If it can get startled and run off, it might be good to cover all exits.

He is going to get a GPS collar for the dog, as if it really wants to run, it will run. It weighs 45kg and can pull very hard.

Ah, that makes sense. With how big it is, blocking the exits might be a bad idea, and it could destroy things, or injure itself.

The return that they get is probably the joy in the reunions. Yay for the found dog!

And also I think if we just keep being relentlessly decent it will eventually rub off on other people like a contagion.

I used to think that being decent would be contagious, but I guess I was never decent enough.

If we have any effect on the decency of people around us I don't think we always see it (it goes outward and other people notice).

What a beautiful story Mr. Taraz. Life will always give us back what we give.

Gratitude to that great group of women in your city and to all who are rescuers of lost pets.

In the forest all human beings are: the big bad wolf, the hunter, little red riding hood, granny, it's time to be awake and aware and forewarned...in the urban jungle.

It is amazing the amount of effort people will go to for animals. Yet, I wonder if they would do the same for a human? :D

I hope, too, the same effort for humans, Mr. Taraz.

Aw that's such a good news story! Dogs can be so amazing. I had a crazy collie once who used to find her way home to me by visiting every house shed been to with me until she found me. Sometimes over a range of 50 km, like when I told her to stay outside the library at uni and she thought I'd left and took three days to get home when I thought I'd lost her.

Yay for people who look out for animals.

You didn't leash her to a post?
Though, if you forgot her then, she wouldn't have been able to get home. :D

She was so well behaved she didn't need a leash 😂 It was so odd when I came out from my studies to find her gone!

A real miracle at Christmas.

A little of my faith in humanity has been restored.

But people are different, moreover, at different times and in different situations, most people are both good and evil.

All people are good and evil - it depends on circumstances. We have built a world where people are more incentivized to be bad, than good.

I’m glad your friend found his dog. I don’t really like dogs though but I heard they are nice pets, lol

They are nice pets - though I don't want big dogs anymore.

Thanks to those strangers who fed her. Otherwise, she wouldn't live under that conditions. I see the numbers of such people have been incrrased after pandemic, but mostly for cats :)

I wonder if cats can be tracked like dogs? They seem like animals that wouldn't be found, if they didn't want to be found.

resilience, which is such a valuable skill, can also be just nature doing its thing.

whether this kind of trauma has always existed, but we are less capable and skilled at dealing with it, so the impact it has now is greater.

We are being forced farther and farther from knowing nature, from being able to decipher the messages nature has for us, and from being able to care for ourselves. We expect our governments to protect us, to care for us, as you say here:

people feel entitled to receive support, but not the obligation to provide support.

The future, I believe, will show the lies of government, and bring us a new kind of currency, caring within your local community. We wouldn't need government at all.

being part of a community also comes with the responsibility to add support into the community when others need it too.

I am so happy the dog survived and has been returned to her loving home! Great story!

Love to read it dear, i don't have any dogs but two cats.

Unless you are an elderly woman, Don't call me dear.

my bad, i will never call you that.

All's well that ends well. Woof!
I hope this doesn't lead to an outbreak of puppy fever!

Great post!👏 You have addressed, with a true story, also complex themes such as PTSD, resilience and providing support in a few words😊... I believe that one of the objectives of any writer is not only to leave his or her particular mark but also that the reader, reading between lines, reflect on things that maybe you didn't see that way before... Regarding PTSD, you mention that we don't know if it has existed long before, it reminded me of a good book I once read "Healing Collective Trauma" by Thomas Hübl, Perhaps you and others may be interested... On the other hand, more than resilient, your friend's dog is antifragile and that is how we can all be, because resilient is the ability of reinventing yourself and overcoming difficult situations, the ability to return to the initial state after a difficult situation... while "antifragile" is not only returning to the initial state but that difficult experience makes you return being much better and stronger ... really the dog's ability was amazing due to the weather conditions but he came back stronger than he was, and as you say "prepared"... that ability is admirable in any person or animal... finally ( It's time to finish the comment because it's quite long already😅) I would like to remember a phrase from Plato that said something like "Looking for the good of our fellow men, we will find our own"... thank you very much for your post, my respects. ..and sorry for the long comment😁🙏

This is such a great read with so much to learn. Forming close bonds within the community helped the people of Okinawa and it’s also the secret to their longevity.

Great story! I'm very happy for your friend, and his pooch. It's incredible that the dog acted normally once he was home again.

resilience, which is such a valuable skill, can also be just nature doing its thing

We all have these skills, but we have been untaught them, via messages that say only experts have the knowledge and wherewithal to effect improvement. If we are told that mere resilience is not enough in cases like this dog's, then we won't even try to access our own thoughts that might help us out. I'm not saying that right, but I think you know what I mean. We could all do this, just as this dog did it. We could find food and water, we could stay away from danger, we could survive.