Abiding Trails
Real stories about dogs, faith, and life lived outdoors - built on structure, responsibility, and purpose.
Abiding Trails
Loyalty Isn’t Automatic
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Most people think loyalty is something that just exists—something you either have or you don’t.
But that’s not how it works.
In this first episode of Abiding Trail, I break down what living with a structured pack of dogs has taught me about loyalty, responsibility, and paying attention to what’s actually happening in front of you.
With multiple dogs in different groups—Deimos and Atlas together, Titan with Freya, Nyx, Balor, and Galene, and Gaia being introduced separately—this isn’t a perfectly balanced setup. It’s a structured one. And that structure isn’t optional—it’s necessary.
Through real-life experience, I’ve learned that you can’t ignore behavior or hope things work themselves out. Without structure and consistency, problems build. Tension grows. And eventually, things break down.
The same applies outside of dogs.
Loyalty isn’t automatic just because something belongs to you. It’s built over time through daily actions, consistency, and a willingness to handle things the right way—even when it’s inconvenient.
There’s also a deeper layer to it—recognizing that there is a right way for things to be handled. When structure is in place, things hold together. When it’s not, they don’t.
This episode sets the foundation for what Abiding Trail is about: real-life observations, lived experience, and the kind of lessons that come from actually paying attention.
If you’ve ever thought loyalty was something you should just have, this will challenge that.
Because it’s not automatic.
It’s built.
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Having multiple dogs changes how you look at loyalty really quick. I've got multiple dogs, and they're not all together. They just can't be. Damos and Atlas, they stay together full time. There's stability there. There's structure. Then there's the other group. Titan, Freya, Nyx, Baylor, and Galeen. And Titan, he's one of the young ones. High energy, doesn't really understand boundaries quite yet. He's one that will bulldoze through space, through structure, through whatever's in front of him. And Atlas, he's different. Those two have history. They've already had a fight. So they're separated. They have to be. And Gaia, she's off on her own right now. She's not ready to be brought into everything yet. That has to be done the right way. So this isn't some calm, perfectly balanced setup. It's structured because it has to be. And when you live like that, you start to see things differently. You don't get to ignore behavior. You don't get to just hope it works out. Because if you do, well, it doesn't. What I started realizing is this loyalty is not something you just get because they're your dogs. It's not automatic. It's built through structure, through consistency, through actually paying attention to what's going on. Because when you don't, things break down, henchions build, problems, well, they show up. And eventually it turns into something bigger than it needed to be in the first place. I've seen that firsthand. And I think that's where people get it wrong. They want things to just work out. They want peace. They want loyalty, but they don't always want to build it. And the more I've paid attention to it, there's a right way for things to be handled. There's a structure to it. And when that structure's there, things hold together. When it's not, well, they don't. Loyalty doesn't just show up, it comes from what you do day after day, whether you feel like it or not. Loyalty is not automatic. It's built. That is the standard. I'll see you in the next one.