Charger and I enjoying a moment

Are Love and Passion Enough?

February 13, 20266 min read

Are Love and Passion Enough?

Me and Charger enjoying a moment

There’s a lot of talk about love this time of year.

Romantic love. Big love. Passion. Devotion. The kind that feels bright, charged, and full of possibility.

But I keep returning to a quieter question:

Are love and passion enough?

From what I’ve observed over time, I don’t think they usually are.

Love and passion can carry us far—but without grounding, without learning, without connection beyond ourselves, they tend to ask too much. That bright flame, once full of potential, can burn fast. It fizzles. And when it does, the loss isn’t just emotional—it’s directional. Energy that could have grown into something durable simply dissipates.

The Pattern I Keep Seeing

In the work I do—across the many forms of human remains detection with dogs—I’ve seen this pattern repeat.

Good people arrive with open hearts and genuine excitement. They want to do something meaningful. They want to work alongside their dogs. They want to belong to work that feels important.

And then they run into friction.

Not because they lack care—but because they’re navigating challenges they didn’t know how to anticipate:

  • Gaps in understanding how animals actually learn

  • Difficulty inside mentorships or group dynamics

  • Limited access to learning environments that support growth without pressure

So the story tightens around love.

“I’m going to train this rescue husky for detection—she’s a good girl. She loves the snow. She loves to work.”

Sometimes that’s true.
Sometimes… maybe it isn’t.

Love can make us loyal to an idea longer than the idea serves the dog.
Love can make it hard to see what’s being asked—and who it’s really for.

Not every basketball-loving kid ends up in the NBA. Not every dog belongs on the front lines of detection work. Both paths tend to require a particular mix—natural promise, opportunity, guidance, and support.

And the same is true for the human.

Years of Watching Things Fade

Before settling into Archaeology Human Remains Detection—a field I value for its depth, history, and long view—I worked across many parts of Search and Rescue K9.

Along the way, I noticed something that stayed with me.

A lot of quiet fading.

People whose early enthusiasm slowly gave way to frustration.
People who didn’t know what they didn’t know.
People who might have chosen differently if they’d understood the road ahead.

Often, they weren’t wrong to care.

They just didn’t have guidance, shared language, or a place to work through the learning curve.

There’s a steady influx of passionate, well-intentioned people into a landscape that hasn’t always been built to support learning over time. That observation—more than any single moment—is part of why I created Dog Merickel. (Yes, I still smile at calling it “Dog.”)

I wanted a place I wish I’d had earlier.

A place I wish existed.

A place where curiosity could breathe.
Where learning didn’t require posturing.
Where care for the work didn’t have to turn into self-exhaustion.

This Question Isn’t New

What’s interesting is how old this question really is.

Humans have been writing about love, devotion, and endurance for centuries. Across cultures and eras, the same theme keeps surfacing: passion opens the door, but sustained work requires intention and community.

Some writers, like Epictetus, warned that loving without accepting limits leads to clinging and fear. Others, like Seneca and Marcus Aurelius, described love as something quieter—an act of character, a way of showing up when emotion fluctuates, a practice rather than a feeling. I’ll admit it—I love reading the Stoics, not as doctrine, but as steady companions for thinking about responsibility, limits, and how to stay oriented over time.

Aristotle—not a Stoic, I know—described lasting love as grounded in friendship, shared purpose, and time. It’s an enduring philosophy many people still recognize: love isn’t just something you experience—it’s something you participate in.

More recent thinkers echoed that same idea: love isn’t something you fall into and coast on. It’s something you stand inside deliberately, with responsibility and care. It falters when it replaces purpose instead of walking alongside it.

Different voices.
A familiar through-line.

A Simple Through-Line I Keep Coming Back To

When I strip all of this down to what I’ve lived and observed, it tends to look like this:

  • Passion opens the door

  • Love deepens the bond

  • Structure keeps it livable

  • Character keeps it ethical

  • Shared direction keeps it moving

  • Luck still gets a vote

Or, more simply:

Love without wisdom wears people out.
Love with intention has a chance to last.

Why I Built This Space

When I look honestly at all that fading—
the stalled teams, the quiet disappointment, the burnout that never quite gets named—it’s rarely because people didn’t care.

It’s because caring alone isn’t sustainable.

Love opens the door.
But without structure, learning, and shared direction, it can quietly become too much for one person to carry.

That’s the space I’ve spent years standing inside.

Not a failure in the work—but a place where support and shared understanding haven’t always been easy to find.

So I created one.

Dog Merickel, and the Society For Dogs, exist as a protected thinking environment. A place where people who take this work seriously can slow down enough to learn—together. Where questions don’t have to arrive polished. Where curiosity can come before confidence.

This work also depends on community care—an important cousin to self-care. Not something abstract, but the shared responsibility of creating conditions where people can keep learning, reflecting, and staying engaged over time. Psychological safety isn’t assumed here; it’s something we actively look after.

This isn’t about overturning science—we honor it.

And it isn’t about claiming authority or final answers.

It’s about asking better questions, staying thoughtful, and improving how we work over time.

It’s about direction—how we orient ourselves and make decisions as the work unfolds.

This work—human remains detection, archaeology, field deployment, partnership with dogs—lives inside complexity. Many things are well understood, and there is always more to learn. What matters is how we think, how we learn, and how we stay oriented over time.

I’ve found that progress grows more steadily through Community—people doing the work, sharing perspective, and building understanding together, one step at a time.

That belief shapes everything here.

I’m here to help committed Handlers learn together and understand their dogs—and the work they’re doing—more clearly.

My role is to create space where humans can collaborate and learn in more meaningful ways.

To trade going through the motions for intentional understanding.

To choose presence over armor.

To hold responsibility and curiosity side by side.

That’s why love and passion alone were never going to be enough for me.

What keeps this work livable over time are intention, care, shared learning, and a willingness to stay engaged when the work asks something new of us.

If that resonates—
if you’re looking for a place where you don’t have to rush, perform, or prove—
this is the work we’re doing here.

And it’s work I’ll keep showing up for.
Steady. Honest. Together.

Go be great. And if you need a thought partner along the way, I’m here.


Janie Merickel is a Human Remains Detection Dog Handler and educator with nearly two decades of experience working at the intersection of detection work, science, and archaeology. Through Dog Merickel and The Society For Dogs, she focuses on intentional training, skilled observation, and building Community that helps Handlers align real-world practice with evolving scientific understanding.

Janie Merickel

Janie Merickel is a Human Remains Detection Dog Handler and educator with nearly two decades of experience working at the intersection of detection work, science, and archaeology. Through Dog Merickel and The Society For Dogs, she focuses on intentional training, skilled observation, and building Community that helps Handlers align real-world practice with evolving scientific understanding.

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