What Pets Can Do: Health and Healing
I was visiting a community hospital recently, waiting in line for a coffee. Across the lobby was a large, beautiful dog. As visitors and patients stopped to pet the dog and talk with the owner, you could literally see how their faces lit up with smiles and their bodies relaxed.
In the week leading up to exams at my daughter's school, they bring in therapy dogs for the students to interact with. It helps reduce anxiety at a very stressful time for students. For many people, animals provide countless health benefits.
Cats, dogs, birds, fish, hamsters: How have animals comforted you, helped with recovery or promoted good health for you?
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@marylou705 I hope your cat recovers well, he looks so sweet. My love for animals has gotten much stronger due to Facebook! So many stories about them.
JK
@ jimhd Thanks for the summary. How long did you have Barnabas? Are YOU a pro dog trainer? ...or just a natural like me, . but I did train guide dogs for the blind with an established school for about a year. Back then I walked about 17 miles a day training dogs. Now with my disability, I can walk up to a 80% of a mile a day. I've been in weekly therapy now for almost 4 years and my therapist and I have a ball together and I work hard to see him smile. And I have trained all the smooth collies I had for 57 years to have many AKC obedience, rally, agility, tracking and sheep herding titles. , gailfaith here.
@contentandwell we had a ruby named Phoebe. Loved her.
@gailfaith You've had some amazing experiences training dogs! You must really miss that part of your life.
Teresa
Gail, @gailfaith
Barnabas was 9 when he died.
@gailfaith
I'm not a pro trainer, but I know what I need in a service dog.
Jim
Though I trained Tani to be my official service dog, he came up with things to help me on his own! Once your dog realized you needed her for help, did she come up with any ideas of her own also? The only thing I trained him for was to bring me the cordless phone in case I fell. Of course he already had some advanced obedience titles, so retrieving was already a skill he had down pat. I made sure no matter where in the house I sent him from to where "his" phone was, he knew where to get it. But it was funny to watch him. Seemed like he had to refresh his memory as to where it was, as I could see him look into every room on the way. But he always came back with the phone. I had the phone on a low stool so it was "mouth high" for him. I had the phone wrapped in the cloth so that his saliva would not create and issue with the use of the phone. One time he did arrive with only he cloth, but I sent him back for the phone and he found it and returned with it!
Hi Teresa. Yes I do miss having a pet, but as I wrote somewhere recently, now being 81, and my smooth collies usually lived to 13 - 15 years, I don't want to leave my dog an orphan. So I am not planning on getting another dog. And with my disabilities, I can no longer train a dog as I did previously. Though not having a dog "hurts" some, losing my independence since I no longer drive is a much bigger issue for me at this time. Maybe that is a blessing in disguise in that it keeps my mind off not having a dog around. gailfaith
@ jimhd. So sorry to hear that. He was still young. That makes losing them really tough. gailfaith.
Gail @gailfaith
I haven't noticed any services she's come up with on her own. I'll be watching.
Jim