I’ve gotten a total of 12 hours of sleep in a week because he keeps me up. He’s a beagle, so his screams are the loudest thing on the planet.

I love him so much. More than I love myself. But the lil dude is really infuriating me every night. He just wants me to hold him because he doesn’t feel good.

Last night he figured out how to open his crate from the inside, so I had to use a carabiner to make sure the door wouldn’t open.

I have to endure this for 3 more weeks because he’ll be on his antibiotic for that long.

Edit: y’all, I’m not actually mad at my dog. More frustrated at the situation and tired. Chill out

  • southsamurai
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    131 year ago

    Fwiw, you’re probably getting most of the shit because of where you posted. As stressful as the situation is, the term infuriated has connotations beyond the literal meaning. Since you not only posted in a place with that in the name, but used it as a description of your emotional state, those connotations came into play.

    Fury or rage, even on a mild scale, isn’t really the response that’s socially acceptable towards a sick dog.

    Now, you probably didn’t mean you are actually mad at the dog. I assumed you were mad at the situation, not the dog. It seems that other responders assumed the anger was with the dog. And there is a difference between those things.

    Maybe you are actually mad at the dog, I can’t say for sure either way. If that’s the case, it may help if you take some time to say out loud to yourself that it isn’t the dog, it’s the stress and lack of sleep that you’re mad at. Seriously, it will likely help.

    When my little corgi love was in her last week, she was having trouble sleeping. She’d wake up and get scared if she was “alone”, which just meant in her bed right beside ours, rather than with one of us camping on the floor with her. So she’d cry and whine. None of us were sleeping well, obviously. And you do get mad when you’re not able to sleep right. But taking the time to remind yourself that that’s what you’re mad at, not the dog, it lets you keep your emotions channelled in a better way.

    But, hey, you’re gonna get through it. Your pup is going to get through it. When you finally get to talk to the vet (I saw your comments saying you had already called), don’t be afraid to ask for something to help the little guy stay calm through his distress. No bullshit, we do it for humans already, and medication to keep the dog calm and resting will help him as much as it helps you. And it doesn’t even always take super strong stuff. some dogs respond well to antihistamines in that regard. There’s plenty of options available.

    Believe me in this, the stress is worth it. Hold onto the knowledge that he’ll be back to normal in a few weeks. You’ll both get there :)

    • @[email protected]OP
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      191 year ago

      Yeah. I’m not actually mad at my boi. More frustrated and exhausted. I’m just trying to keep his life as normal as possible during this because change in routine messes with his anxiety. I’m going to see what my vet recommends for this. This is the hardest thing I’ve gone through with him, but he’s worth it. I just have to remind myself that this will pass.