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Sean Lowe offers new details following repeated attacks by his family dog who left him injured.
Take to his Instagram stories With the youngest son of Isaiah on Tuesday, April 15, the first Bachelor41, he thanked supporters for their support before providing a health update.
“Hey everyone, we’re back,” Lowe started. “I haven’t been on Instagram since the whole dog but I wanted to call on here and tell everyone, thank you so much. I mean we get thousands and thousands of messages … people wish me well and share similar stories. But whatever thank you, thank you, thank you, because I could say it’s sincere and just.”
In terms of how Lowe is doing at the moment, he confirmed that he was “doing great” before disclosing information received by his doctor.
“I heal, my scars are not as bad as I thought they would,” Lowe detailed before pointing the camera to his wrist. “Isaiah likes to kiss this one here. The doctor told me that one is almost as good as he is going to get, he is kind of red. He won’t be red forever but I will have a cool scar there forever.”
Lowe also gave his son the opportunity to share his thoughts. “You got anything you want to say?” He asked the 6 -year -old, who replied, “Thank you for talking to Daddy for nice things.”
Lowe was revealed in Instagram Post March 17, His dog, Moose, attacked him Twice within the span of 12 hours. Lowe’s wife, Catherine Giudici – Who Lowe Spouse in January 2014 and divides the sons of Samuel, 8, and Isaiah, 6, and his daughter Mia, 5, with – appearing emotionally prominent while sitting by his side in the video.
“On Thursday I had some friends over to a barbecue. Catherine The children took For the center, and we’re just a barbecue here on my patient, and it was a very nice night, so I had the doors and windows open, and some of the smoke from the barbecue started drifting inside, and our smoke alarm started to go away, ”he explained.” So I grab a dish rag and I’m going over to waft from the smoke sare. And because I hold the rag dish, Moose comes up and, like, bitten it and is a kind of dipping my finger truly aggressive, which is something he doesn’t do. So, you know, I put kind of, ‘No, Moose.’ “
According to Lowe, then Moose started to bite his feet so hard that the dog “put holes” in his shoes.
“At this point again, so much chaos happens with the alarm going away, I give it a very strict, like, ‘Moose. No.’ ‘And it was fine for that moment where it shows its teeth on me and just attacks me, and I don’t mean bite and run away as many dogs do when they are scared or protective.”
Although Lowe said he was “badly bleeding,” he managed to get Moose into the backyard.
“He comes back through the door and attacks me for the second time, and not trying to be dramatic, but honestly I just felt that I was fighting for my life here against a dog,” he remembered. “Not just a dog. My dog, right? Like, he’s my dog. We’ve only got it for a little under three months, but, like, He is my dog. “
Given the size of his injuries, Lowe asked his friends to “rush me to the ER.” There, he received stitches in “five or six different places” on his arm. The following day, Moose accidentally went out and “made Beeline” to Lowe, attacking him again “less than 12 hours” after the initial incident.
“Just again, feel torn into my flesh,” he said. “And so I can wrestle it to the ground. And this dog is so strong, it’s so explosive, but I can wrestle it to the ground. I get hold of his collar, but I know that he has torn my arm open, and I know just, like, that I’m fighting for my life here, like, I feel if this dog goes up, it’s going to me, it’s going to me Going to me, going to me, going to me, it goes to me, going to me, going to me, going to me, going to me, going to me, going to me, going to me, going to me, going to me, going to me, it goes me, going to me, going to me, going to me, going to me, it’s going to me, going to me, going me, going me, going me,
The Lowe 911 family thereafter called, with police intervening to subdue Moose, and returned to hospital for more stitches. Lowe stressed that the dog was not “fault” as it was likely to experience trauma before they adopted it in January, and although the family did Plans to rehome MooseThey are still lost in spite of the circumstances.