Dayton Daily News

Neglected dog rescues bullied boy

Now their bond is unbreakabl­e.

- By Christina Hall

The resWATERFO­RD, MICH. — cue dog rescued the boy.

“When they locked eyes, I knew. It was just unbreakabl­e.”

C heri Radlick’s voice cracked as she shared the story of her son, Jordan, and his dog, Fred.

Jordan, a 12-year-old sev- enth-grader, has alopecia and no hair, eyebrows or eyelashes. In elementary school, he had friends and sleepovers and participat­ed in sports, his mother said.

But when he got to middle school last year, everything changed.

He was bullied, and when another student took off his hat and threw it across the room, Radlick said, Jordan became vulnerable and closed off the world.

She said he didn’t want to be around people and wouldn’t go outside or to school. Jor- dan was so depressed, she said, he wouldn’t leave his bedroom. He stopped being the “normally giggly, let’s-go- do-this kid.”

The panicked Waterford mother was at her wits’ end tr ying to help h er son. She pulled him out of public school and enrolled him in an online school. She took him to ther- apy. A doctor recommende­d getting an animal. That’s where Fred came in. Radlick talked with Courtney Protz-Sanders, executive director of Paws For Life in Troy. Protz-Sanders thought she had the perfect dog for Jordan.

The Australian shepherd/ lab mix had been neglected, cr ated24hour­sad ay and had as kin condition and other medical problems and nails so o vergrownth­eyw er ec urled under, Radlick said.

“I can tell you from the min- ut eJordangot ou tofthecar and he saw Fred, it wa slove at first sight,” Radlick said of her son and the now 4-yearold, 90-pound pooch that sleeps with Jordan and goes everywhere possible with him. “Fred has changed Jordan’s life so much.”

Jordan nursed Fred, includ- in gh elping with leg exercises. Now Fred is returning the love he was shown. And he’s helping Jordan live again.

Jordan goes outside with Fred and throws the ball. He’s thinking about joining a golf league, his mother said, and he said he may be ready to have friends again.

Radlick said Fred’s arrival allowed her to avoid giving her son antidepres­sants at the young age of 11.

“He’s everything I’ve hoped for and more,” she said of Fred. “I don’t k now how I can even express into words the magnitude that Fred has done with my son. I really believe that without the love and companions­hip of Fred, that my son wouldn’t be where he is today.”

“I owe Paws For Life my son back,” she said. “My son was rescued by a rescue dog.”

“I think they rescued each other,” Protz-Sanders said. “They were exactly what each other needed …I think in Jor- dan’s case, this was truly lifechangi­ng.”

Radlick’s shared her fami- ly’s story, winning a $25,000 grant for Paws For Life from the Petco Foundation. Her story and three others from Michigan — including one from Sydnee Thompson of Troy and two cats she adopted from the Ferndale Cat Shelter — were among the winners in a national contest sponsored by the pet supply company, with $85,000 in total grants going to four animal groups in the state.

“It’s affirming. It gives you something to look forward to,” Thompson, 26, said of her cats, Luc aa nd Rocco, who she has had just over one year .“How you’re able to mak eal oving, healthy home … It’s a sign of accomplish­ment, a lot of positive emotions that positively impac tonmepers onally and howI ’m able to deal with my chronic illnesses.”

Thompson, who has had depression and chronic pain, said he rca tsa nd th eir t wo siblings were born to a cat that pretty much lived outdoors and left her weeks-old kittens, possibl yb ecause she was attacked by another animal or hit by a vehicle.

Thompson, who had lost her dog a year earlier, was browsing the Ferndale Cat Shelter website, not really looking to adopt, but then saw a picture of Luca and fell in love with him and his litter mates.

“My heart was just fit to bursting,” she said.

Thompson planned to adopt tw oo ft he other kittens, but she said that one died from an underlying heart condition and there were concerns the other one had a different type of medical condition. So Thompson adopted Luca and Rocco, two brothers, who provideu ncondition­al love ,c uddling and motivation, especially on Thompson’s difficult days.

“Having pets fosters that need for empath ya nd compassion,” she said. “Dealing with the most difficult symptoms of depression, if something happens to you, your cats would care.”

Thompson’sstorywont­he Ferndale Cat Shelter a $10,000 grant, which will help cover veterinary bills for injured felines — with the amount alone possibly providing vaccinatio­ns,spay or neuter and microchips for approximat­ely 75 cats and kittens, said Patty McCormick, direc torofo perations.

She said the shelter has adopted out 418 cats and kittens so far this year, nearly a dozen more than last year.

e overjoyed, couldn’t be happier,” she said. “The more cats and kittens we can help and find homes for, it’s a great service to the community.”

Protz-Sanders said Paws For Life may split its $25,000 grant in several ways — helping to pa yforabo ut $10,000 in medical bills for a rescued animal that was struck by a car; spaying and neutering dogs and cats, and putting some money toward a $1.2-million capital campaign to build its own shelter.

This is the second time the group has won a Petco Foundation grant, receiving a $12,000 grant for a story submitted last year, she said.

Protz-Sanders said the stories “enhance my belief that animals can change your world if you really give them a chance.”

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