Maple was afraid of storms.
Not the light kind with soft rumbling in the distance. No, it was the loud, sky-ripping kind that turned her into a trembling, panting mess. Her whole 55-pound shepherd mix body would try to wedge itself under anything — beds, desks, once even inside an empty laundry basket.
We tried everything. Calming chews, white noise, those “dog-soothing” playlists on YouTube. She’d tolerate them, but nothing really worked.
Until the chair.
It was a big old recliner I’d inherited from my grandfather. Ugly thing — too wide, covered in faded tan fabric, and missing one of the wooden arms. But it was sturdy. Comfortable. And Maple had never once tried to climb onto it.
Until one stormy night, when the thunder cracked hard enough to shake the windows.
She jumped onto the chair like it had been calling her name all along.
Curled up into the corner, head tucked, paws tight.
I sat beside her on the floor, wrapped her in her weighted dog blanket, and we just waited.
From then on, it became “the thunder chair.”
Whenever the sky growled, Maple would trot straight to it.
I added a soft orthopedic cushion to the seat and laid the blanket across the back like some throne room accessory. It became her space. Her safe zone.
I even moved the chair closer to the window so she could watch the rain when it calmed her. I started sitting in it during non-storm days, just to read, and she’d hop up beside me, gently resting her head on my shoulder like, “You’re scared too, huh?”
She’s older now. Slower to climb, quicker to doze. But last week, a storm rolled in — the first of the season — and she made her way to the chair like it was tradition.
I draped the blanket over her like always, sat beside her on the floor again, and whispered the same thing I always did:
“You’re safe here. You’re home.”