From the BBC:
“Guide dog
and owner reunited after months apart”
A blind student
and her guide dog have been reunited after spending 213 days apart. Kimberley
Burrows, 32, said "best friend" Tami spent months with a foster
family after undergoing surgery to remove benign tumours. Ms Burrows, from
Leeds, said she felt "lonely" and "depressed" without the
eight-year-old Labrador by her side. But after an emotional return Tami has
"slotted back into my life perfectly", she said. Final year mature
student Ms Burrows said she could "feel the sensation of Tami's tail
wagging madly through her body" when they reunited. Ms Burrows has had
sight loss since birth, losing the remainder of her vision when both of her
retinas became detached four years ago. Since the pair were matched in 2014,
Tami has helped Ms Burrows to go shopping, make trips to the post office and
university, as well as to concerts before the coronavirus lockdown. While heavy
metal fan Ms Burrows enjoys the show, she said Tami "gets to enjoy the
privilege of being backstage with the crew and sometimes the band
themselves". "She gives me the freedom to enjoy my life just like
anybody else can, in a safe and supported way."
'Fighting
back tears' When Tami had to go for surgery last August, Ms Burrows became
so lonely she appealed to people in a local Facebook group offering to dog-sit
other Labradors. "I felt very lost and vulnerable whenever I went
out to university or the shop and stopped going out at all if I could help
it," said Ms Burrows, who spent her 32nd birthday alone. Ms Burrows
did some retraining with her cane to help her get around when Tami first left,
but said it "couldn't replace" having a guide dog. After being
told Tami was to return home in late March, Ms Burrows said she "cried and
cried". "Our reunion was so lovely," she said. "When
I got the call that Tami was downstairs in the reception of my student
accommodation, the lift couldn't arrive fast enough. "I opened the
door and she ran to me, sniffing and investigating every part of my face that
wasn't covered with a mask. I could feel the sensation of her tail wagging
madly through her body and I found it so hard to fight back tears." Tami
has remembered all of her guide dog training since her surgery and Ms Burrows
said she "couldn't be any prouder or more impressed". "It
feels like she hasn't been gone at all and like I haven't been through any of
that heartbreak. She slotted back into my life perfectly like my other puzzle
piece."
^ I can’t
imagine how hard it was to be without your guide dog especially knowing that
they were going through surgery for over 200 days. Now they are reunited and
both are healthy so hopefully things will only be great from now on. ^
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