sweet_marie
Really Experienced
- Joined
- Mar 27, 2005
- Posts
- 133
Confession
I have to agree with both points.
When I first got my puppy, she was 5 weeks old, I had a really really hard time not doing the whack thing! I am so ashamed to say that one time, she had just bitten my ankle and it bled a bit, but it was in play...well I bopped her a good one out of instinct and broke her nose...she was about 3 months. Well, I just about died right there....I'm not a violent person, but that's all I knew! So I got right on my own ass about it, went to a forum, for writers actually, and pleaded with help...found a dear writer friend whose husband raised dogs...and we've been ok. And my "parenting" issues and methods have been drastically changed! One job, last year, was taking care of and tutoring a little boy, about 4, with autism. What a trial! But, it forced me to find other means and methods of making peramaters, establishing boundries and making sure that he knew I was the adult of the relationship and no, we weren't going to make that a point of discussion.
My dog, Sara, though suffered no ill effects from my BS. However, she, and her puppy Jack, have suffered from my being a student and not having the time to get them as socialized as I might. So that's the next project.
Also, the support. That's exactly what I/we need. Get it hammered into our heads that we are good people and we're not wierd, just approach things a little different, and if we keep working on it, we'll get the wrinkles straightened out. I know some awesome women, just met them, who've been through the banks of Hell and back again, and they've put time and effort into themselves to straighten out. They are the kind of people others look up to and want to be, they have that much character. So, light at the end of the tunnel!
I guess moral of the story: raise puppies who are more forgiving/carry less grudge and practice on them. Unless you're a compulsive abuser rather than someone who just doesn't know better. Then leave the animals alone!
K, off soap box
hugs to all
Marie
Don K Dyck said:heheheheh . . . my favourite is applying green emasculation rings to the appropriate parts . . .
. . . but as you say, violence begets violence . . . and herein lies the root of many relationship problems.
Individuals grow up in families where the first correction by an adult for a perceived error by the child is a whack, accompanied by verbal abuse rather than a quiet explanation and a demonstration of the correct thing to do.
I agree totally with the importance of your supportive approach.![]()
I have to agree with both points.
When I first got my puppy, she was 5 weeks old, I had a really really hard time not doing the whack thing! I am so ashamed to say that one time, she had just bitten my ankle and it bled a bit, but it was in play...well I bopped her a good one out of instinct and broke her nose...she was about 3 months. Well, I just about died right there....I'm not a violent person, but that's all I knew! So I got right on my own ass about it, went to a forum, for writers actually, and pleaded with help...found a dear writer friend whose husband raised dogs...and we've been ok. And my "parenting" issues and methods have been drastically changed! One job, last year, was taking care of and tutoring a little boy, about 4, with autism. What a trial! But, it forced me to find other means and methods of making peramaters, establishing boundries and making sure that he knew I was the adult of the relationship and no, we weren't going to make that a point of discussion.
My dog, Sara, though suffered no ill effects from my BS. However, she, and her puppy Jack, have suffered from my being a student and not having the time to get them as socialized as I might. So that's the next project.
Also, the support. That's exactly what I/we need. Get it hammered into our heads that we are good people and we're not wierd, just approach things a little different, and if we keep working on it, we'll get the wrinkles straightened out. I know some awesome women, just met them, who've been through the banks of Hell and back again, and they've put time and effort into themselves to straighten out. They are the kind of people others look up to and want to be, they have that much character. So, light at the end of the tunnel!
I guess moral of the story: raise puppies who are more forgiving/carry less grudge and practice on them. Unless you're a compulsive abuser rather than someone who just doesn't know better. Then leave the animals alone!
K, off soap box
hugs to all
Marie

maybe I misinterpreted your meaning in your earlier post.