BY LENORE SKENAZY | Do people save dogs or is it the other way around?
That’s the question posed by the Broadway comedy “Sylvia,” starring Matthew Broderick as a disengaged middle-aged New Yorker who falls in love with a very human dog — so human that she is played by the talking, sniffing, adorable Annaleigh Ashford. But the who-saves-who question was also posed after a performance of the show last week, to an audience of dog fans.
On stage were Broderick, co-star Robert Sella, and two dog experts: Rachel McPherson, founder and executive director of the New York-based Good Dog Foundation, which has 1,000 trained therapy dogs volunteering in the tri-state area, and Dr. Laurie Santos, founder of Yale’s Canine Cognition Laboratory. Yes, they are studying doggie thinking at Yale.
“How many of you stuck around tonight because you have a canine at home?” Santos asked the audience.
“How many of you find yourself wondering what’s going on inside his or her head? Do they love me? Do they care about me?”
The audience laughed a little self-consciously.
Good news, the professor reported: Our dogs do love us. In fact, when they look into our eyes, they are bathed in as much love as we are.
“Scientists have learned that part of the bonding that allows us to bond with a dog is the same thing that helps us bond with our babies,” Santos said.
Babies are filled with what is colloquially called the “love hormone” or “cuddle hormone.” It floods their brain, and as we look at them, it floods our brains too. When researchers examined dogs’ urine after this same kind of gazing-into-their-owners’ eyes, they found the love hormone in it, too.
Studies of wolf urine did not show the same thing. Somehow, dogs evolved to transmit and receive the same love signals as human babies, and beguile us the same way.
This bond is so intense that the Good Dog Foundation harnesses it to help people who are lonely, scared or hurting.
“We work with lots of patients in hospitals, rehab units, nursing homes,” said McPherson, who has run the program for 18 years.
One time, early on, she and her dog were helping a man who’d been paralyzed on his right side by a stroke.
“He could not get his body to move,” she recalls. But when her dog jumped into his lap, the man would desperately try to throw the ball.
This was back before the rehab unit was completely thrilled with the idea of having a dog around. But as the patient began to get his movement back, says McPherson, “The doctor was amazed at the results.” He became a big supporter of the Good Dog Foundation.
Schools are signing up, too, to help students with everything from autism to dyslexia, as well as other learning and emotional issues.
“We work with the kids one-on-one because they become so stressed out in the classroom that they can’t read,” says McPherson. “But then they read to the dogs and it’s amazing. They feel very comfortable. And what’s phenomenal is that when the dog and the child are in a space, reading, the child becomes ‘cool’ to the other kids. They say, ‘Can we go read to the dog?’ So what was a negative becomes a positive, and the kids’ reading really does improve.”
A recent study at Mt. Sinai Beth Israel, here in New York, scientifically proved another benefit to human-dog interaction: chemo compliance.
The study involved 42 patients undergoing six weeks of chemotherapy and radiation for head and neck cancers. The protocol is grueling. Many of the patients get very sick and can’t eat. Some have trouble talking. But over the course of their treatment, with a loving dog at their side, their feelings of emotional and social well-being actually increased.
“I would’ve stopped the treatment, but I wanted to come see the dog,” wrote one patient.
In the play, Matthew Broderick’s character is similarly saved by his love (graduating to obsession) with the dog he found: Sylvia. But eventually his awakened soul goes on to reconnect with his wife, a human played by Julie White.
Dogs need humans, humans need dogs, and humans need humans, too. Call it a tail as old as time.
Lenore Skenazy is a keynote speaker who authored the book, and founded the blog, Free-Range Kids (freerangekids.com).