This story is not about Sigmund, but I just have to share it because I am constantly blown away by what working guides do. This is from a lady with a working guide. She is a teacher in a high school and school has just started back with all its commotion and chaos:
"Enjoy this story of what happened with me and Nacho the other day at school. These dogs are amazing.
⚪️ Arriving back to school mid-day after meeting with four new teachers and a principal,
⚪️ Walking the halls during a hectic passing period,
⚪️ Approaching the commons during the transition between two crowded lunches right down the way,
⚪️ Encountering unbroken streams of loudly talking students going multiple directions,
⚪️ Pausing with Nacho as he surveys the scene,
⚪️ Trusting he will weave his way through the commons as he has done every day after school this year,
⚪️ Feeling him move to the right and following his lead,
⚪️ Realizing his direction is not cutting across the commons,
⚪️ Trusting him anyway,
⚪️ Holding my breath when I realize he has taken a side hallway,
⚪️ Holding my breath even more as I wonder if he will turn at a hallway parallel to the commons,
⚪️ Grinning ear-to-ear when he turns at a hallway parallel to the commons,
⚪️ Blinking back tears as I realize he chose a safer way and pictured the exact route ahead of time,
⚪️ Stopping a colleague to babble with Joy about this dog’s decision making ability,
⚪️ Arriving safely at my office after circumventing the commons completely,
⚪️ Celebrating with a crazy, rambunctious, exuberant game of tug-the-elephant with a dog who is my buddy, my champion, my hero."
I am in awe of these animals and what the professional trainers do to get them to think and analyze a situation and make decisions which are best for their human. I share this because these are the stories which make it easier to give up your pup at the time of parting -- the dog can make a huge difference in how a visually impaired person travels through life and I get to say I was a tiny part of that.