Post by shannonamous on Jan 25, 2012 16:54:11 GMT -5
CROWBAR
"And no one thinks they are to blame, Why can't we see, That when we bleed we bleed the same?"
five hundred twenty five thousand six hundred minutes
NAME CROWBAR
GENDER Dog
NICKNAMES Crow, C, Mainly Crowbar
AGE 3 1/4 years
BREED Beauceron
SEXUALITY Straight
PACK? Currently a loner.
HI, I'M CROWBAR, AND THIS IS ME:
Crowbar had the life of a guard dog. Not a harsh world, but not kind nor easy. He was mainly just an item to his master, and he was never really cared about by him, however, Crowbar still worked hard to please him, and he respected him.
The life of a guard dog there was very simple, though, but required skill and training. Crowbar was trained by his master when he was very young, so his alert and protective instincts are natural, and his senses and ferocity skills are sharp, though his bark is much worse than his bite.
Crowbar, since trained to appear vicious, never had many friends outside of his family that served with him. He's very quiet and will always pretend to bite your head off at first site, however, if you get past his aggressive appearance, he can be a very loyal friend willing to please with every action. He's a natural servant, as he as never really had privileges, either. What he needs is a good friend to teach him that it's alright to depend on someone once-in-a-while.
Crow never really understood what love was, either, and never had a chance to feel it or ever express it, hence his lack of expression when relaxed. Whenever he did begin to get close, though, his friend was lost. Many of his family members and fellow guard dogs died from many causes, such as gun/knife wounds from invading humans, sickness, his own owner, who would consider termination if the wounds brought the dog down on the job, or if they weren't 'guard dog material'.
Really, Crowbar is a gentle giant who just wants a good friend to confide in, but he doesn't know how to or has had the chance to, as he had been trained that all strangers are harmful.
SHONNAMOUS
how do you measure, measure a year