Happy New Year and may you have a happy and wonderful year
John J. O’Dell
For all your real estate and construction needs
Call (530) 263-1091
Real Estate Broker
General Contractor
DRE# 00669941
SCL# 261854
Happy New Year and may you have a happy and wonderful year
John J. O’Dell
For all your real estate and construction needs
Call (530) 263-1091
Real Estate Broker
General Contractor
DRE# 00669941
SCL# 261854
Happy New Year and may you have a wonderful 2011
John J. O’Dell
For all your real estate and construction needs
Broker and General Contractor
Call (530) 263-1091
DRE# 00669941
SCL# 261854
Abba made this video for the New Year of 2010 but it still works for 2011!
Happy New Year to all and may you have a wonderful 2011.
John J. O’Dell
Real Estate Broker
(530) 263-1091
Happy New Year to all!
For all your real estate needs
Call John J. O’Dell
(530) 263-1091
Real Estate Broker
DRE# 00669941
General Contractor
SCL# 261854
Happy New Year to all
John J. O’Dell
Real Estate Broker
Call (530) 263-1091
DRE # 00669941
Happy holidays to all.
John J. O’Dell
Real Estate Broker
Call (530) 263-1091
DRE #00669941
Another way to get your credit card picked!
For all your real estate needs call
John J. O’Dell
Real Estate Broker
(530) 263-1091
DRE# 00669941
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GPG3zSgm_Qo
Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays to all
John J. O’Dell
by Lisa J. Lehr
Nevada County is a very pet-friendly place. Most of us here have one or more pets. And pets, over the generations, have enjoyed a status upgrade from outdoor animal to family member, albeit one who lies under the table at mealtime rather than sitting in a chair like the other family members. Many people—including me—believe that a family without pets is incomplete, and a childhood without the experience of raising pets is a disadvantaged childhood.
That experience, though, almost invariably includes the death of a pet. It’s a fact that most people outlive most types of pets; almost all children who have a pet will, at some point, lose one. As difficult as it is for the kids—not to mention for the parents who must explain death—it’s an important life experience.
Sadly, some parents try to spare their kids the pain of losing a pet with some type of coverup—by offering another explanation for the pet’s disappearance, or by concealing the death entirely. The first scenario, mostly used with dogs and cats, usually involves saying it “ran away.” The “ran away” story is offered either when the pet is known to be dead, and the parents have discreetly disposed of the body; or when a pet has disappeared, its fate unknown. Bad things sometimes happen when pets go outdoors, and sometimes old or ill pets will go away to die alone.
The second coverup method is most often used with small pets—fish, turtles, reptiles, perhaps rodents. In these cases, the parent removes the deceased pet while the kids are at school or asleep, replacing it with a similar one and hoping the kids won’t notice.
While beliefs about the afterlife and where pets “go” when they die may differ, and parents are entitled to some leeway when it comes to this subject, saying that the pet “ran away” does more harm than good. Death, as difficult as it is, is final. It offers closure. It’s part of the denial, anger, acceptance cycle that the experts agree we go through in loss. “The pet ran away” leaves kids vulnerable to false hopes and endless, unresolved speculation about what might have happened to the pet.
Why doesn’t he come home? Doesn’t she love us anymore? Is he hurt? Cold? Hungry? Is someone holding her prisoner? Did he find someone else he likes better? Why? Is my doggy or kitty ever coming home? Shouldn’t we be trying to find him? Why aren’t Mom and Dad as anxious to find her as I am?
Eventually, the child will be old enough to figure it out. Or enough years will have gone by that the pet couldn’t possibly be still alive, and the child gives up hope. But there’s no real closure. And that spoils the memory of the relationship they had.
That’s cruel.
If you know what has happened to the pet, and it’s something upsetting—e.g., it was hit by a car or attacked by another animal, and you have found the remains—the truth can be somewhat softened for younger kids. You don’t have to tell the whole truth. If your pet has simply disappeared, however, make every effort to find it! It’s amazing how often a lost pet will turn up just a few doors down, simply because the owner never bothered to put up “lost pet” signs. And if your pet has been taken in by some kind person, her or she will happily stay in the new home and forget about you. Your child, however, doesn’t forget.
Swapping dead pets for new ones is an insult to the child’s intelligence. Parents may get away with it for a while, but doing so simply postpones the inevitable and difficult “death” question. If a child experiences the death of a pet before that of an important person (a grandparent, for example), he or she is better prepared for this bigger loss. Interfering with this natural life lesson will only make the harder lessons…harder.
Here are some ideas for helping kids cope with the death of a pet:
So when your family experiences the loss of a pet, take the opportunity to teach your children or grandchildren how to deal with death. Deep-six the “ran away” story. Fido or Fluffy or Buddy or Tinkerbell died. Went to doggy or kitty Heaven, crossed the Rainbow Bridge, returned to Mother Earth—whatever fits with your beliefs. But never say it ran away, unless you know for certain that it did. And never pull the pet-switch trick.
Lisa J. Lehr is a writer and copywriter as well as animal lover living in Grass Valley. She can help you promote your business with a full range of online and offline marketing pieces. A member of Empire Toastmasters, she’s available to speak to your business or professional group. Visit her website www.justrightcopy.com for more information, opt in for a message series, and receive a free Marketing Guide.
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Lisa J. Lehr
I write words that make you money–just ask me how.
www.justrightcopy.com
Visit my website and sign up for my fr~ee marketing tips.
New! No~cost Marketing Guide now available at my website.
Here’s wishing all my viewers a very happy Thanksgiving. For the kids in us, here’s Charlie Brown’s Thanksgiving:
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=42u0TiZZPCY