Culture

The Secret Lives of Dogs (and Other Domestic Conspiracies)


A family in North Carolina recently uncovered a crime ring operating out of their very own kitchen. The culprit? Not a burglar. Not a raccoon with ambition. Not even a teenager with a late-night cereal dependency.

No. It was Chase, their 8-year-old Golden Retriever. He is a dog whose face likely says, “I have never done anything wrong in my entire life, and frankly, I don’t appreciate the accusation.”

And yet surveillance footage revealed the truth. Chase has been helping himself to the family refrigerator like a tiny, furry, highly committed food influencer.

Now, I don’t know about you, but this feels less like a cute news story and more like a warning shot.

Because I, too, live with suspects.

I have long suspected that my dogs are running a parallel society when I leave the house. A society governed not by rules, but by vibes. A society in which I am, at best, an unreliable narrator.

Let’s review the cast.

The Curmudgeon
This one would have you believe that life is an endless series of inconveniences. You moved? Offensive. You breathed too loudly? Unforgivable. You dared to exist while holding food? A personal attack.

But now I’m wondering is he, in my absence, throwing off the shackles of performative grumpiness?Is he prancing? Frolicking? Hosting tiny, invitation-only dance parties?

Is he Chase?

The Little One
At home there is chaos. Barking. Commentary on everything. The UPS truck. A leaf. The concept of wind.

But what if that’s all a carefully constructed identity?

What if, the moment I leave, he sits quietly contemplatively perhaps journaling? What if he’s the strong, silent type when I’m not there. He’s saving all his noise for me like I’m his emotional support audience?

The Big Goof
Look. I love him. But let’s be honest there are limits to reinvention.

Even in my wildest imaginings, he is still a goof.

But maybe he’s a more sophisticated goof when I’m gone.
A goof with intention. A goof with a plan. A goof who knows how to open a refrigerator.

Psychologically speaking, this whole thing is deeply unsettling.

We like to believe we know the beings we live with. That their personalities are stable, predictable, rooted in observable behavior.

But what if we are simply witnessing a curated version?

What if our dogs, like all of us, are managing impressions? Presenting one self to the audience (us), while living entirely different lives when the curtain drops?

Erving Goffman would have a field day here. Front stage its “I am a well-behaved dog who occasionally barks at existential threats like squirrels.”
Backstage: “Open the fridge. Tonight we feast.”

And so now I am considering installing cameras.

Not for security. Not for safety.

For truth.

Because I need to know

Who is dancing?
Who is meditating?
Who is committing light burglary?

And most importantly

Who is Chase among us?

Because if an 8-year-old golden retriever in North Carolina can run a covert snack operation undetected, then frankly, I have been underestimating everyone in my household.

Including the one currently looking at me like he doesn’t even know what a refrigerator is.

Sure, buddy.

Sure.

I welcome your thoughts