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experiencelifemag.com
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A Dog's Best Friend
As a kid, John Garcia depended on a canine pal who always seemed to see the best in him. Today, he returns the favor by helping dogs deemed “unadoptable” become their best selves - and find loving, forever homes.
By Laine Bergeson |
October 2009 |
Despite
graduating high school early and
having his pick of several enticing college scholarships, John Garcia went to
work at a nearby animal sanctuary right out of school because he had a debt to
pay — though not the financial kind. “I grew up
in a very small town, and my best friend as a kid was my dog,” says the
28-year-old dog trainer and star of the National Geographic Channel’s series
DogTown, a show that chronicles the lives of the dogs in
DogTown, the designated dog area at the Kanab, Utah–based Best Friends Animal
Sanctuary.
A self-described chubby Latino
kid growing up in a conservative Anglo town, Garcia wound up as a loner much of
the time. He says only the animals in his life refused to judge him and
never tired of his company. “Pretty much my entire life I knew I wanted to
work with animals. I always felt I had a debt to repay to them for what
they’d done for me growing up.”
He got that chance when he
landed a job at the 3,700-acre Best Friends sanctuary. Tucked into the majestic
red-rock country of southern Utah, the center came to national prominence in 2007 when
it took in the 22 most-abused dogs the government rescued from former NFL star
quarterback Michael Vick’s illegal dog-fighting ring.
Unlike many humane societies
and other rescue organizations, Best Friends was committed to working with the
dogs — all American Pit Bull Terriers or pit bull mixes — rather than
euthanizing them. While the government mandated that two dogs remain at the
sanctuary for life for their own safety and happiness, the other 20 dogs (once
they pass the rigorous stipulations set out by the government) will eventually
find new homes — an outcome many people once considered impossible.
Garcia, however, was not
surprised. Despite their reputation, he says, American Pit Bull Terriers are
filled with potential. “Pitties, by nature, are very loving and very loyal. If
they are brought up properly and socialized properly, they are the best dogs in
the world.” (Garcia is pictured here and on the cover with
Georgia, 7, a rescued Vick dog who
has become such a shining example of pit bull potential that she travels around
the country with Garcia doing media events — they appeared on The
Ellen DeGeneres Show together last
winter.)
Garcia and his wife, Mckenzie,
share their home with a cat and two dogs, including Spikey-Doo, a Pit Bull
Terrier mix. “I’ve had my girl since I was 16 years old. When I first
got her she was touted as one of the prize bloodlines for fighting
dogs,” Garcia says. “But she’s lived with a menagerie of animals. I still have foster dogs rotating
through my house very frequently, and she is one of the best role
models.”
So,
despite all this evidence to the contrary, why do some dogs get written off as
impossible cases? It’s all about perception, says Garcia, who just finished shooting the fourth season of
DogTown. “With the
Michael Vick dogs we have at the sanctuary, it’s not their behavior that we have
to overcome, it’s the fact that they’re pit bulls; it’s the fact they’re
fighting pit bulls; and it’s the fact they were Michael Vick fighting pit bulls.
They actually have three major things working against them —
not their behavior.”
What
those dogs have working in their favor are people like Garcia and the rest of
the DogTown staff at Best Friends, who believe in every dog’s ability to
overcome trauma, and whose patience and determination help them succeed.
“Really, all we do at DogTown
is help unleash the dog’s potential,” says Garcia. “I’ve seen dogs come from
everywhere from war zones to puppy mills to hoarding situations, where they were
living with hundreds of other animals. Then you have the Michael Vick
dog-fighting case, where dogs were literally put in a pit and had to fight for
their lives. That is some pretty severe emotional trauma.”
And
there are days when that trauma rubs off on Garcia. “It’s always a bit of an
emotional roller coaster here,” he admits — especially when physically abused
animals show up. But, there’s always an antidote nearby: “If I have a bad day,”
he says. “I just walk into a dog run and pet a dog and it’s all
better.”
That’s just part of the magic
Garcia finds working with dogs. They are, he says, remarkable creatures that
teach him something every day. “When they survive those horrible circumstances —
and can come back and show love and respect and look to us for guidance — that
is a huge testament to not only the breed itself, but to dogs in general and how
resilient they truly are.”
There’s a lesson in their
example for all of us, he adds. “I know people who seriously get traumatized on
their way to work! Just sitting in a bit of traffic! And here are dogs who have
to fight for their lives and they are not half as traumatized,” says Garcia.
“They say humans are at the top of the food chain, but when it comes to
resilience and living up to our full potential, I still think we have a lot to
learn from dogs.” Laine Bergeson is an
Experience
Life senior
editor. Go behind the scenes at our
cover shoot with John and Georgia at experiencelifemag.com/videos.
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A Dog's Best Friend
As a kid, John Garcia depended on a canine pal who always seemed to see the best in him. Today, he returns the favor by helping dogs deemed “unadoptable” become their best selves - and find loving, forever homes.
By Laine Bergeson | Coverage Department, October 2009 |
Despite
graduating high school early and
having his pick of several enticing college scholarships, John Garcia went to
work at a nearby animal sanctuary right out of school because he had a debt to
pay — though not the financial kind. “I grew up
in a very small town, and my best friend as a kid was my dog,” says the
28-year-old dog trainer and star of the National Geographic Channel’s series
DogTown, a show that chronicles the lives of the dogs in
DogTown, the designated dog area at the Kanab, Utah–based Best Friends Animal
Sanctuary.
A self-described chubby Latino
kid growing up in a conservative Anglo town, Garcia wound up as a loner much of
the time. He says only the animals in his life refused to judge him and
never tired of his company. “Pretty much my entire life I knew I wanted to
work with animals. I always felt I had a debt to repay to them for what
they’d done for me growing up.”
He got that chance when he
landed a job at the 3,700-acre Best Friends sanctuary. Tucked into the majestic
red-rock country of southern Utah, the center came to national prominence in 2007 when
it took in the 22 most-abused dogs the government rescued from former NFL star
quarterback Michael Vick’s illegal dog-fighting ring.
Unlike many humane societies
and other rescue organizations, Best Friends was committed to working with the
dogs — all American Pit Bull Terriers or pit bull mixes — rather than
euthanizing them. While the government mandated that two dogs remain at the
sanctuary for life for their own safety and happiness, the other 20 dogs (once
they pass the rigorous stipulations set out by the government) will eventually
find new homes — an outcome many people once considered impossible.
Garcia, however, was not
surprised. Despite their reputation, he says, American Pit Bull Terriers are
filled with potential. “Pitties, by nature, are very loving and very loyal. If
they are brought up properly and socialized properly, they are the best dogs in
the world.” (Garcia is pictured here and on the cover with
Georgia, 7, a rescued Vick dog who
has become such a shining example of pit bull potential that she travels around
the country with Garcia doing media events — they appeared on The
Ellen DeGeneres Show together last
winter.)
Garcia and his wife, Mckenzie,
share their home with a cat and two dogs, including Spikey-Doo, a Pit Bull
Terrier mix. “I’ve had my girl since I was 16 years old. When I first
got her she was touted as one of the prize bloodlines for fighting
dogs,” Garcia says. “But she’s lived with a menagerie of animals. I still have foster dogs rotating
through my house very frequently, and she is one of the best role
models.”
So,
despite all this evidence to the contrary, why do some dogs get written off as
impossible cases? It’s all about perception, says Garcia, who just finished shooting the fourth season of
DogTown. “With the
Michael Vick dogs we have at the sanctuary, it’s not their behavior that we have
to overcome, it’s the fact that they’re pit bulls; it’s the fact they’re
fighting pit bulls; and it’s the fact they were Michael Vick fighting pit bulls.
They actually have three major things working against them —
not their behavior.”
What
those dogs have working in their favor are people like Garcia and the rest of
the DogTown staff at Best Friends, who believe in every dog’s ability to
overcome trauma, and whose patience and determination help them succeed.
“Really, all we do at DogTown
is help unleash the dog’s potential,” says Garcia. “I’ve seen dogs come from
everywhere from war zones to puppy mills to hoarding situations, where they were
living with hundreds of other animals. Then you have the Michael Vick
dog-fighting case, where dogs were literally put in a pit and had to fight for
their lives. That is some pretty severe emotional trauma.”
And
there are days when that trauma rubs off on Garcia. “It’s always a bit of an
emotional roller coaster here,” he admits — especially when physically abused
animals show up. But, there’s always an antidote nearby: “If I have a bad day,”
he says. “I just walk into a dog run and pet a dog and it’s all
better.”
That’s just part of the magic
Garcia finds working with dogs. They are, he says, remarkable creatures that
teach him something every day. “When they survive those horrible circumstances —
and can come back and show love and respect and look to us for guidance — that
is a huge testament to not only the breed itself, but to dogs in general and how
resilient they truly are.”
There’s a lesson in their
example for all of us, he adds. “I know people who seriously get traumatized on
their way to work! Just sitting in a bit of traffic! And here are dogs who have
to fight for their lives and they are not half as traumatized,” says Garcia.
“They say humans are at the top of the food chain, but when it comes to
resilience and living up to our full potential, I still think we have a lot to
learn from dogs.” Laine Bergeson is an
Experience
Life senior
editor. Go behind the scenes at our
cover shoot with John and Georgia at experiencelifemag.com/videos.
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