An Ohio couple just made the best decision in their life for keeping their dog after they were tempted to have it sent to another family. And that decision to keep the loving dog saved their baby’s life.
Mindi Wynne fell in love with a collie at the pet store in the Trotwood, Ohio, mall where she worked. She kept telling her husband, Ron, how much she wanted it, but he didn’t seem to pay much attention. So she just kept visiting it during her work breaks and hoping that one day it would be hers.
Then one day when Mindi went to play with the dog, it was gone. “Where’s my collie?” she asked. “It’s been sold,” the pet store employee told her. She was heartbroken, but not for long. When she got home from work, she discovered that it had been sold to Ron. She named the beautiful long-haired collie Papillon, after the breed in the cage next to him at the pet store, and looked forward to many happy years with this new family member.
But two years later, the Wynnes feared that they couldn’t keep Papillon much longer. Although he got along well with their nine-year-old daughter, Amanda, and seven-year-old son, Matthew, they were worried about how he was behaving around their newborn daughter, Rachel.
“He acted what we thought was very, very jealous when Rachel was born,” said Ron. “He was always right there, right where the baby was.” He and Mindi were concerned for Rachel. “We thought all the attention Papillon was giving the baby was jealousy,” he said. “We thought maybe we ought to get rid of him.”
All that changed on June 19, 1993. Mindi fed five-week-old Rachel a bottle of formula and then put her down for her nap. While she slept peacefully on her back, Mindi went to take a shower. She had just gotten in the shower when Papillon started barking wildly. Afraid he was going to wake Rachel, she called through the closed bathroom door for him to be quiet. “‘Pappy, shut up!’ is an often-heard phrase around our house. He’s a very well-trained dog,” said Ron. “But he wouldn’t shut up.”
Before Mindi could try to quiet him again, Papillon slammed into the bathroom door, knocking it off its hinges. He then jumped into the shower and back out again. Mindi sensed trouble and followed him.
“He ran around, barking, knocking doors open, and finally burst into the baby’s room,” she said. “He jumped up and put his front paws on the crib. When I looked at the baby, she was blue.” Rachel had stopped breathing.
Mindi screamed for Amanda and then immediately started doing CPR to revive Rachel. Amanda, who had been playing in the yard when she heard her scream, ran in to see what was happening. When she saw her performing CPR, she called 911. An ambulance arrived minutes later and rushed Rachel to the hospital.
Rachel, who is fine thanks to Papillon, had suffered from something called reflux. While she was sleeping, she spat up some of her food and it went back down the wrong way. Instead of going down her esophagus, it went down her windpipe, stopping her breathing.
If Papillon hadn’t been so insistent in alerting Mindi to her condition, she would have choked to death within minutes. “We’re just real pleased and really proud,” said Ron. “We’re just tickled pink with Papillon. And what of the talk about giving him away? I don’t see that as a possibility anymore. He’s staying right there.”
Papillon had become a local and national hero. He was grand marshal of a parade in Trotwood and was named first runner-up in Ken-L Ration’s 1993 Dog Hero of the Year contest.
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Sources: OpposingViews, Little Things, Little Things/Facebook