Okay, before anyone jumps down my throat, let me explain.
We’ve had Miso—our little tan Amstaff—for almost three years now. She’s never been aggressive. She’s barely more than a cuddle machine with a tail. Honestly, she’s more scared of the vacuum than our toddler is.
So the other night, our son Levi wouldn’t settle. He was overtired, cranky, tossing around in his crib. My partner Salome had just pulled a double shift, and I didn’t have the heart to wake her up again. I figured maybe Miso could help calm him.
I brought Miso into Levi’s room and laid her down on the floor by the crib. He instantly lit up—reached through the bars to pet her. Then, kinda on instinct, I scooped Miso up and let her curl up next to him. They both passed out in like five minutes. It was honestly the calmest night in weeks.
But the next morning… Salome lost it.
She saw Miso in the baby monitor playback and went stone cold. No yelling. Just that scary quiet kind of mad. She said I was reckless. That no matter how sweet Miso is, she’s still an animal, and Levi’s still a baby. She packed a bag and left with Levi to stay at her sister’s.
I’ve been texting her since, trying to explain. I even sent a picture of Miso curled up with Levi’s stuffed bunny, looking guilty as hell like she knows she messed up.
Salome finally texted back just one line:
“You don’t get how serious this is.”
Now I don’t know if this is just about the dog anymore.
That text spun me into a pit of second-guessing. I kept rereading it, wondering what else I’d missed. I knew Salome was big on boundaries—she’d always been the more cautious one. But this felt deeper. Like I’d chipped away at something more than just trust.
I tried calling her twice that day. Straight to voicemail.
By the third day of silence, I drove over to her sister’s place. Not to make a scene—just to talk. Her sister, Reema, answered the door, and she looked… tired. Not mad. Just drained. She stepped outside and shut the door behind her.
“She’s not ready to see you yet,” Reema said, soft but firm.
“I didn’t mean to put Levi in danger. I thought it would help him sleep. That’s all.”
“I know,” she said, glancing at the ground. “But you broke a deal you didn’t even know you made.”
That stuck with me. The deal I didn’t know I made.
Later that night, I finally got a longer message from Salome. She said when she was five, her family’s terrier had snapped at her cousin. No permanent damage, just a nip—but her parents covered it up. They didn’t want to get rid of the dog, so they blamed the cousin for pulling its tail. She still remembers hiding under the table, watching her aunt cry in the hallway.
That changed things.
It wasn’t just about Miso on the bed—it was Salome reliving something she’d buried. And I, without knowing, had made her feel like history was repeating itself.
The next weekend, she agreed to meet at the park. Just her and Levi. I brought coffee, left Miso at home.
She looked tired, but she let me hug Levi, and that alone felt like a win.
We sat on a bench while Levi toddled around with a half-eaten apple slice. I apologized. Really apologized—not just for the dog thing, but for not asking why it hit her so hard.
Then I said something that felt heavy but honest:
“I think I keep trying to fix everything fast… because I’m scared of sitting in the mess.”
She looked at me for a long time. Then nodded.
“I do that too,” she said. “But I also need to know you’ll protect Levi the way I do—even when I’m not there.”
It wasn’t instant forgiveness. We didn’t ride off into the sunset or move back in that night. But she said she wanted to come home soon. Just not all at once. And we agreed to start therapy—together and separately. Something to help us learn how to stop repeating things we never asked for in the first place.
Now Miso sleeps on a dog bed outside Levi’s room. And honestly? That feels right. Salome still flinches sometimes when she sees Levi cuddle Miso too hard, but she’s trying. And I’m learning that love isn’t always about the big gestures—it’s about respecting the unspoken stuff, too.
So yeah, I let our dog sleep next to our toddler, thinking it was harmless comfort. But what I really learned was that safety—emotional and physical—isn’t always about what makes me feel okay. It’s about listening when someone else says, “This scares me.”