I opened the day with window patrol because a shadow moved near the driveway and nobody else seemed emotionally prepared. I climbed onto my approved lookout spot, narrowed my eyes, and watched the outside with professional stillness. A leaf crossed the walkway. Suspicious. A person walked past with a bag. Extra suspicious. The humans kept drinking coffee like this was not a developing situation.
On our walk I located three smell updates and one grass patch with layered information. I paused to read the full report. My human said, “This way, Max.” This way was exactly where I already was. That is why I worry about their navigation credentials.
Lunch involved crunchy lettuce. I do not always request lettuce, but when it appears I must test whether it has snack potential. The first piece was acceptable. The second piece had more confidence. I performed one sit, one stare, and one tiny paw lift to request continued research funding. The human laughed and said I was cute. Useful, but not legally the same as more lettuce.
Later I attempted to organize hallway zooms. I stretched, lowered my front paws, and looked at Oski with the clear message: launch sequence ready. Oski blinked and wandered away. I ran one demonstration lap by myself, mostly for morale.
Training included recall practice, which means the humans say my name and I decide whether their offer sounds competitive. Today it did. I arrived quickly and received praise plus a treat, proving again that fast paws are a valuable household service.
By bedtime I had protected the window, reviewed the grass, opened lettuce negotiations, and filed a failed zoom proposal. Nobody understood all of it, but that is why I keep such detailed records.


