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Let's Panic: The Book!

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How to Endure and Possibly Triumph Over the Adorable Tyrant
who Will Ruin Your Body, Destroy Your Life, Liquefy Your Brain,
and Finally Turn You
into a Worthwhile
Human Being.

Written by Alice Bradley and Eden Kennedy

Some Books
I'm In...

Sleep Is
For The Weak

Chicago Review Press

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Let's Panic

The site that inspired the book!

At LET'S PANIC ABOUT BABIES, Eden Kennedy and I share our hard-won wisdom and tell you exactly what to think and feel and do, whether you're about to have a baby or already did and don't know what to do with it.

Lets-Panic.com → 

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Monday
Jun302008

Here is a story for you.

We begin with Alice, walking her dog, listening to her iPod. Not bothering anyone. Turning the corner, she sees a small, furry blur rushing toward them. A dog, a comically tiny dog, is running out of a backyard, and headed right for Charlie. It's trailing a leash, so she figures the owner must be somewhere behind it.

Charlie, who is not a lover of other dogs, promptly freaks, attempting to get as far away from the other dog as his leash will allow. Alice tries to continue on, but the dog follows. Where is the owner? No one is showing up to explain why this puffball of a dog is free to accost the general public. The dog, whom Alice has named Teeny, appears to want to play, but the playing is taking the form of nippy neck-lunges. Charlie assumes that the dog wants to tear open his carotid. Unable to make a run for it, he finds himself running in frantic circles around Alice. Teeny follows. Yay! Fun times! thinks Teeny. (Actually, Teeny is probably thinking "tththththththththththththth" because Teeny has a brain no bigger than a nail clipping.) Having grabbed Teeny's leash, Alice is now thoroughly tangled. Her earphone cord somehow gets involved with the leashes. It's chaos. "Hello?" Alice calls out to the empty street. "Whose, uh, dog is this?"

Charlie backs away and slips out of his collar, freeing himself, and darts into the street. Teeny tries to follow. Alice screams for him to return, but he's no fool. And go back to that tiny scrabbly thing who wants at his precious neck parts? No thank you. He can still be seen at the far end of the block, peeing on a bush, eyeing that hateful tiny thing. Alice lets go of Teeny's leash and runs toward Charlie, but of course Teeny gets there first, causing Charlie to run farther away and cower behind a tree. Before both dogs run to the next town, Alice grabs Teeny's leash. She attempts to get Charlie to return to her using her most forceful tone of voice, and somehow he falls for it. Now she's managed to slip his collar back on him! Bet you didn't think that was going to happen! Meanwhile Teeny lunges and yaps and Charlie shrieks in horror. Someone's growling. Her? The dogs? Hard to say. She holds both dogs as far away as possible from each other. Now what?

There are at least two more minutes of Teeny lunging for Charlie and Charlie running in circles and Alice getting caught up in both leashes. There must be a smart way to solve this problem , Alice keeps thinking, I should be able to triumph over a dog who is the size of my fist. Is there anywhere to tie up Charlie for the time being? There is not. So she gets both dogs onto the porch of the house from where Teeny may or may not have come, and rings the doorbell. A larger dog barks and scrabbles at the front door. Charlie looks at Alice, as if to say, Are you inviting that dog out, too, because if you are I don't think I can live much longer.

She rings the doorbell. And rings again. Teeny tries to go for Charlie's neck one more time, and he lets out this mournful howl, as if he's calling out I AM TOO OLD FOR THIS SHIT. So Alice ties Teeny to a bench on the front porch of the house, and Alice and Charlie make their way back home. And either the owner of that house will arrive home and think, excellent, I see my evil tiny dog got out to wreak havoc yet again, or else, who left that curiously noisy koosh ball tied to my porch?

Reader Comments (66)

we used to go down to our neighborhood park late in the evenings to walk our dog off his leash.this one time he overshot chasing the ball and saw a woman walking a little teeny dog. he ran toward the little dog like a seventy five pound locomotive to say hi and the teeny dog's owner heard us screaming at our normally polite and well mannered dog to come back.without turning around or even breaking stride she whipped that little dog up into her arms like he was a yo-yo on the leash.i now want a little teeny dog just for that reason.perhaps there is one still available in your neighborhood, alice?
July 2, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterLindaloohoo
Ha!
July 2, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterreadersguide
I think this situation is why God gave me an animal allergy, so I have an excuse NOT to rescue wayward dogs, and yet still feel OK about myself.
July 3, 2008 | Unregistered Commentermanager mom
My dog is a fighter not a flighter (an ongoing training challenge - his fear is of bigger dogs, not smaller, but oh my God, I get it), so I can just imagine the craziness that must have been going on. Before he was afraid of big dogs, I once found a pair of gigantic Huskies wandering in the ravine and we called animal services to get them - fortunately they had dog licenses, so the animal services people were able to reunite them with their owner. If you own a dog, you will never run out of nutty stories!
July 3, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterKim
OK, you killed me with the koosh ball part.
July 3, 2008 | Unregistered Commentervelocibadgergirl
this is brilliantly written, imho.

July 3, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterleonie
You're being featured on Five Star Friday:http://www.fivestarfriday.com/2008/07/five-star-friday-lucky-edition-13.html
July 3, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterschmutzie
Let's hope those people were indeed the owners of the teeny koosh ball doggie. Otherwise, koosh ball might have been dinner for the larger doggie inside that house!!! :-)
July 6, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterEvil Genius
I laughed SO hard while I read this. You definitely know how to get inside the mind of a dog! Hilarious.
July 7, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterMaggie
Poor Charlie. I have a "Charlie." His name is Obie. He has a brother (related only through species) named Ajax. Ajax loves dogs like Teeny. Especially the ones that don't get stuck in his teeth on the way down.
July 7, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterClayjack
Hahaha! This story was great, but the "curiously noisy koosh ball" slayed me! And the way the story ended in a completely different way than I expected - excellent comedy! Well, what else can you do with yappy little dogs that are running amuck?
July 7, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterMarie
Alice, I think I piddled a bit as I am laughing and trying not to disturb my friend watching TV in the next room! Teeny may be my next dog's name.
July 7, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterhoneybfly
That reads just like a new chapter in the original Alice in Wonderland. Too funny.
July 8, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterSteph
One of my wieners would have loved Teeny. The other one would have eaten him for lunch.

Halliehttp://wonderfulworldofweiners.blogspot.com/
July 8, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterHallie
This was like one of those problems from the logic games section of the LSAT.
July 9, 2008 | Unregistered Commentervictoria
That was so funny! Dry wit there's nothing better. Thanks for the hardy laugh!
July 16, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterMamaNona's_Beans

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