Dawn-
I
 have considered sending you our
 story a number of times.  The story might not even interest you.  And 
it certainly isn't as horrid as a lot of stuff on your
 website.  But in the interest of (maybe) understanding the poor 'soccer
 moms' who end up with these dogs, I think I should give it a go.  I ask
 that you please not vilify me for this story.  I made my share of 
mistakes.  I don't know how I could have done it any
 differently, besides giving up earlier or not trying at all.  But no 
hindsight frees me from the ultimate result.  And I know the conclusion 
sucks.  I am much, much wiser now, and back then I hadn't yet realized 
that it isn't all just hype, and there is a possibility (even if remote)
 that it wasn't all my fault.  When this story opens, I had a lifetime 
of dog-owning experience.  I love dogs, consider myself a dog person 
with a special soft-spot for the terrified ones.  I have trained a few, 
loved many, and always felt like I could handle myself well around a 
variety of them.  I have been growled at, lunged at, and once got a nip 
from a tiny dog when I was a kid (totally justified).  I've read many 
books, attended a few obedience classes (none were at a chain store), 
and was extremely comfortable.  
After
 coveting the sweet pit/lab mix a relative had bought, we finally 
received our new pal.  They are neglectful people who throw off pets 
when they get bored, so it was only a matter of time. At a tender 5mos 
old, the puppy already came with a laundry list of bad behaviors, but 
they all seemed like uncorrected puppy-shenanigans to me, and I wasn't 
scared off.  She was cute, and calm, and I
 was no newbie to 'rescues'.  The only things they had done for this 
puppy was good socialization with people and dogs, and teaching her to 
sit on command.  
It is quite a long story, but I will try to sum it up here:
Within
 two weeks, there were multiple dog fights in my house.  The resident 
dogs (a lab/husky and a lab) were both 12 years old, and neither was 
prone to fighting.  Actually, they NEVER fought each other.  One 
particular fight ended with my daughter getting a dog-tooth shaped 
bruise on her leg, even though she had just been sitting nearby.  If I 
could have been sure it was the new puppy, it would have ended the 
roller coaster ride immediately.  I worked hard to establish pack 
hierarchy here (as I always did with multiple dogs), but the fighting 
continued.  When she wasn't fighting with our elderly dogs, the new dog 
was licking our male (neutered) labX's mouth until he growled at
 her.  The rest of the time she just ignored us completely.  She did not
 initiate play, did not ask to be petted.  And anything said to her 
(praise, her name, anything) was met with a blank stare and no body 
language at all.  More like a shark than a dog.  I (probably wrongly) 
assumed her neglectful past had left her with no idea how to read 
inflection, so I exaggerated my facial expressions and tone.  It made no
 difference.  I describe her behavior as 'an island', she truly didn't 
seem to care if we were there or not.
On an almost daily bases I 
was training her in basic obedience.  I think it helps to strengthen a 
bond, and gives everybody confidence.  I tried praise, then food 
rewards.  In desperation, I re-read articles and books on dog training. 
 I tried play-training next.  But no matter what I tried, the results 
were abysmal.  It took me a month and a half to teach her to lie
 down.  The worst part: I only knew she knew the command because dh got 
frustrated and told her to "Go lie down!" in a much less-nice voice than
 I was using.  She did it immediately.  She only became housebroken 
after 5 months, and only because there was snow outside.  (that sounds 
like a joke, but it's not).  All the sweet talking, cajoling, treats, 
and catching her in the act didn't work.
She became an escape 
artist.  She broke the tie out potty-break line we had used with the 
labs for 
years.  Dh fixed it, and she broke her collar.  She was constantly 
running off, and we had to go catch her.   Another time, she got loose 
and launched herself onto my goat's back (going for the back of his 
neck/base of his skull).  Thankfully, he escaped. We came home from a 
trip to town to a slaughter of chickens and a broken window.  We changed
 our management style, bought a crate, and used it religiously anytime 
the door was opened, if an adult couldn't watch her, if we were going to
 be out in the yard (she couldn't be brought out on a leash due to the 
most abhorrent leash manners I have ever seen in a dog), or if we were 
leaving.  It's a miracle she didn't harass the neighbor's livestock 
during one of her.. outings.  No dogs were attacked, either.  I worked 
to teach her to come for the 'oh shit!' moment that happens to 
everyone.  She gave me a blank stare and didn't comply.
Inside 
the house, with supervision, things weren't going as well.  She got in 
the trash if we
 weren't directly in the room with her, or went after it as soon as we 
went to the bathroom.  She stole food from the counters, becoming so 
bold she would steal even if I was a foot away.  She kept picking fights
 with our dogs.
And I cried.
I consulted books, questioned
 everyone I could talk to, relied on the vet and behaviorist.  I could 
feel something brewing, something seething under the surface.  It was 
there in the blank stare, the mid-level head, the not showing interest 
in us at all otherwise.  Something undefinable.  I told my husband I 
could feel it.   Our lives became crating, dog fights, ripped trash, and
 stealing.  The puppy who would play with the kids in the yard never 
materialized.  She did sit patiently to wait for her food bowl, and 
wasn't food aggressive, but that was the extent of what she would give 
us.
After 6 months of this, I decided she needed to be
 rehomed.  In my heart, I felt that she needed someone with a much 
harsher method of discipline than I could or would give out.  Despite 
what I thought I knew, and what I had tried, the bad behaviors were 
getting worse.  I did manage to teach her some basics commands, but 
there was zero connection between her and the rest of us (oh how we 
tried!).  I contacted people and kept my ears open for the right home 
for this dog.  
And then the growling began.  Only at my son.  
The first time, she was next to my chair.  I thought it was guarding 
me.  Concerning, but in an young dog, correctable still.  And a few days
 later she growled at him for no discernible reason at all.  Discussions
 and websearches offered nothing: it wasn't about a resource, wasn't 
about territory, wasn't about me, wasn't about anything he had done.  He
 wasn't yelling, running, or less than 10 feet away from her.  He
 wasn't threatening her at all.  He had no food and hadn't been around 
any other dogs.  
My husband revealed, in our conversation that 
day, that she had been growling at him, too,  from her crate for weeks. 
 I just didn't know.  We immediately put her back in her crate to stay 
(except to go outside) until we could decide what to do.
And 
here's where we did what I would not do now.  We discussed options.  I 
would not keep her here to train because I have children, and I had 
clearly failed already.  I was no longer comfortable just giving her 
away: I had screwed things up so badly, how the hell would I pick out 
the right person for this?  We could have her pts.  Or we could bring 
her to the shelter (well funded in this area), let their professionals 
assess her and treat her in a safe environment, and find her a home or 
have her pts if they thought she was too dangerous.  I absolutely
 abhor shelters- I think they are dens of disease.  Taking a 
supremely pack oriented animal and locking it in a cage, by itself, with
 limited human contact would drive a less sensitive creature mad.  (and I
 get it.  I know most shelter staff have their hearts in the right 
place.  But the entire thing is just so... wrong).  I promised myself I 
would never send any animal to one, ever.  Now, I would have her pts in a
 heartbeat.  But at the time, I didn't know as much as I do now, and I 
thought, as horrid as the idea was, that at least it might give her a 
chance.  I thought maybe a different owner could bring her back before 
she crossed into actual biting.  A note here: if she was, say, a 
generally friendly dog who had started resource guarding, it would have 
been a different story.  But she was neither overly friendly nor was she
 guarding anything.  The blank stare, the lack of interest,
 the absolute refusal to be part of our 'pack' coupled with the growling
 was like a cauldron set to boil a nasty green goo all over.  With no 
loyalty, what was to stop her from attacking us all?  She was just 11 
months old.
The shelter told dh that they 'don't do that anymore'
 when he said we thought pts might be the best answer.  I'm still 
horrified by that.  Not necessarily for this particular dog (who knows 
there), but for the ones who have already bitten.  They don't put any of
 them to sleep for aggression?
Does this dog represent pit 
bulls?  I
 don't know.  I certainly don't have enough experience with that breed 
to make such a conclusion.  I'm sure similar stories could be told about
 lots of different breeds of dogs.  What strikes me is how often, and 
how terrifyingly awful, this stuff is when it happens in a pit bull.  
How permanent the results of mistakes can be.  I certainly can't bring 
back my birds, no matter how much I regret it.  I have seen that same 
blank look in the eyes of another pit bull very recently.  The owner 
(pit bull savvy and honest about this breed) has said he is sweet but 
dumb.  Who am I to question that assessment?  I wish her luck with him. 
 I'll be keeping the kids away.
It was an extremely difficult 
time for us.  I will say that that dog changed my life.  She taught me 
that love isn't enough.  She taught me that 5 months old is too old, 
that rescues aren't to be trusted, no matter what source.  She taught me
 that no matter how hard I try, how patient I am, dogs don't give a 
flying fuck.  She taught me that dogs aren't safe, and that maybe I'm 
not.  She taught me that I could be angrier than I thought.  She broke 
parts of me, and I don't know how many kisses, belly tickles, and 
perfect heels it will take to get that back. For awhile I tried to
 blame her (unknown) parentage, the first people 
who owned her (who got a strongly worded letter from me, to which they 
replied in asshole fashion: she was a fucking PERFECT dog when we gave 
her to you!), and ultimately.. I was just left blaming
 myself.  Oh, she changed my life, exactly like they tell you.  It is 
only by the good graces of a supremely wonderful Border Collie - the dog
 worth waiting for- that I am not terrified of dogs now.  He'll exchange
 a kiss for every tear you give, check on you if you fall down, and 
loves everyone furred or feathered, no matter how small.  He wears his 
heart on his collar, and spares no display of giddy enjoyment at your 
company.  He is what all dogs ought to be- what all good dogs, from 
balanced breeds and mixes- ARE.  He is the fundamental dogness of dogs, 
with no shark blood coursing through his veins.  Just like millions of 
other, non-shark dogs.  The only thing lurking beneath his surface is 
more him.. the same him you see.  And yes, I'm grateful every day that I
 have this dog, who is patient and kind with me.  Who reminds me that I 
can still get it right, sometimes, when I trust myself.  Maybe I
 truly suck with other dogs, but not with this one.
So those 
fur-mommies with their 'babies', who's dog rips the face off a child, 
get zero sympathy from me.  I did my absolute, no-holds-barred, every 
day in the trenches best with that pitX.  And knowing how hard I tried- 
how hard my entire family tried- we would still have taken total blame 
if she had hurt someone.  While in our care, we tried harder than I 
certainly have with any other dog, and yet it would still be my fault if
 she had done something terrible.  I don't believe dogs suddenly bite- 
well, almost never anyway.  I don't believe 'he's never been like that 
before!'  I think it's a crock of poo excuse to cover the fact that they
 saw it coming but don't want to admit it.  At any time on that train 
wreck they could have stopped it, but they didn't.  They had a million 
excuses, until it was too late.  These people make me far more angry 
than the
 dog-fighters.  Those assholes know what they have, know what they are 
doing, and know why their dogs are killers.  The lipstick and 
high-heeled set pretend until they can't.  They flood my fb page with 
cutesy pictures, with stories, with nauseating messages.  They would 
have to have never been around any other dog, ever, close enough to 
breathe on to believe the crock about how extra cuddly, or extra 
friendly, or reliable those dogs are.  They would have to have turned 
off their brain and ignored their newspaper.  They would have to be 
willfully, illogically ignorant.  I get it- I fed into it (albeit 
briefly, and I was never a nutter.. I fell into the 'it's how you raise 
them' clan, though, and pretended the news stories were mistaken 
identity).
And maybe my reaction seems like an over-reaction to 
everyone else.  There was no attack on a human.  We were never bitten.  I
 know I was had by the
 propaganda machine, but so what.  That is nameless, faceless.  What I 
see, when I think about that time, is my exaggerated facial expression, 
my constantly calling her name in a happy voice, the love we tried so 
hard to project, with the shark-eyes staring back at us. In some primal 
way, it is like we had a murderer living in our attic, stealing our 
food, and we never knew it until we heard him on the stairs.  The police
 may have caught him in time, but I still feel violated.  We loved that 
dog, we cried for her, we gave her structure, time, patience.  We 
trusted her.  And in the end, she betrayed us all, she told us as 
clearly as if she had spoken that she would come for us when she was 
ready.  And I think about those other poor morons, the ones hugging 
their doll's-eyes dogs.  The ones who don't see the nearly indefinable 
danger, who don't feel that undercurrent pulling them down.  The women 
in the SUVs,
 with their prettied up pitties, who wear bandanas that say 'kiss-a-bul'
 or something else grotesquely dangerous.  Maybe they don't want to lie,
 when they see the signs.  Maybe, like me, they just don't want to be 
the one who sent that sad old pit dog back to the shelter, who work so 
hard to balance it all that they can't -can't- admit they made a 
mistake.  They don't hear the footsteps on the stairs.  They don't call 
the police.  And by the time they realize who they have, he's already in
 the livingroom blocking the tv.  
I don't know what you will
 draw from this e-mail.  I don't know how I feel about sending it.  But 
ultimately, I think I need to say this: sometimes good people are 
suckered into things they are convinced they can handle (by dog 
trainers, by the shelter staff, by their own good intentions), and only 
educating people about the truth can combat that sort of.. innocent 
disaster.  We
 can vilify assholes in high heels who set these dogs up as princes and 
princesses (and when their satan dog kills/maims someone or
 something, and they claim surprise or blame the victim, we SHOULD) but 
they won't stop adopting these dogs until they learn the truth.  I'd 
like to see the stats on how many first-time pit owners go on to have a 
second.  I know I will never be among that number (nor will I own any 
other 'bully' breed.  Who needs the fucking headache?   Give me a dog 
that actually likes people).  
And shelters should be ashamed.  
They know, they know far more than the middle class women trying to do a
 good deed.  They feed on the ignorance, the malleability of people who 
just want to do the right thing.  It's a slogan for a pyramid scheme: 
counter their excuses until they run out!  Then SELL THEM THAT PIT 
BULL!  Smile as they head out the door- no matter how it ends up, you 
know the dog won't be back up for adoption.  Don't waste time on the 
popular dogs of yesterday, they are so out of fashion. 
 More fighters!  More ticking time bombs!  More sharks in the tank for 
naked ladies to swim with!  And who cares if they are so heartbroken 
they never adopt again, there are 17 million more next year.  It's all 
in how you raise 'em, you know!
Your website has been 
instrumental to me.  I can let go of some of the guilt, some of the 
regret, some of the blame.  But not all- for who knows what happened 
with that dog we sent to the shelter.  I hope, more fervently than I 
have ever hoped before, that the shelter listened to my husband, that 
some foster mom or dad had her pts before she ever made it out into 
public.  It's a lie I tell myself.  I know my border collie will kiss my
 tears away long enough for me to believe it.
Thank you for your time.