You have spent the last decade trying to learn presence, calm, and joy. Your dog was born with all three and has been napping through your efforts.
Rosie is a sixty-pound rescue mutt who has never read a self-help book, never set an intention for her afternoon, and never once questioned whether she belongs on the couch. She greets every morning like it’s the best news she’s ever received. She naps without guilt, plays without purpose, and forgives without being asked. She has figured out everything you’re still Googling—and she did it without Wi-Fi.
Her human is… working on it.
My Dog Is Better at This Than Me is what happens when a stressed, scrolling, over-caffeinated human stops reading about mindfulness and starts watching it—in the form of a creature who practices it every waking moment (and, if the dream-twitching is any indication, several sleeping ones too).
Across ten chapters, B.K. Larrikin pairs true (and frequently humiliating) personal stories with real psychology and neuroscience to chronicle the lessons Rosie teaches without trying: how zoomies are a masterclass in presence, how a squeaky hedgehog is always the right prescription, how a frisbee faceplant teaches more about letting go than a decade of therapy, and how a fire hydrant—examined properly—is an art gallery. Each chapter ends with a practical exercise that takes three minutes, costs nothing, and requires no app.
The lessons are simple. The exercises are simpler. The dog is smarter than all of us.
But this book goes deeper than you expect. Beneath the comedy is a story about depression and recovery, about a rescue dog who showed up at the exact moment a human needed a reason to get out of bed. The epilogue—about the math we try not to do when we love something that won’t outlive us—will stay with you long after you close the book.
Part memoir. Part self-help. Part love letter to a dog who ate a sock and showed zero remorse.
Featuring original illustrations, a book club guide, practical cheat sheet, and a sneak peek at book 2 in the series.
Perfect for dog lovers, recovering over-achievers, anyone who’s been told to “just meditate,” and every human who suspects their pet has life figured out better than they do.
Sit. Stay. Read.