Thursday, July 29, 2010

Over the Top Pet Adoption

So, as I get closer to living in America again, I have gone through certain "I want" phases. For 21 1/2 months now I have wanted a dryer. For 21 1/4 months I have wanted a steady supply of Dr. Pepper. In April, I wanted an SUV. As May turned into June I began to want a house, rather than an apartment. My latest want phase, a mere 5 days from boarding a west bound plane, is a dog.

As my "I want a dog phase" has turned into a mild obsession, I have found myself looking for dogs on the internet. Tonight I surfed over to the Greater Birmingham Humane Society and began looking at dogs. As I read their adoption articles, I thought, "This is a little over the top." I'm all about pets being a part of the family. Don't get me wrong. The GBHS makes it out to be the biggest decision of your life though.

The articles got to the point where I was almost turned off from pet adoption. I'm glad I kept reading though and found the snippet on outdoor dog safety. I expected to find "the dog could escape" (which I did), "the dog could be affected by the weather" (which I did not), and several other things. The following gem is what I DID find and I laughed hysterically.

"Dogs that spend most of their time outdoors are at risk for a variety of reasons. They could escape from the yard and become lost; a disgruntled neighbor could throw poison over the fence or spray the dog with mace or pepper spray; or the dog could be stolen and possibly sold to a research facility or dog-fighting ring." [emphasis added]

Seriously? Has anyone actually ever experienced a disgruntled neighbor throwing poison over your fence in an effort to kill your family pet? Do research facilities buy dogs? I'll give them the dog-fighting ring, but only because I am from Alabama after all.

The moral of the story (ok, maybe not moral, but my opinion) is that if you want to get a pet, you should take care of it. It is, after all, part of Creation, but come on people. Let's put our priorities in the right places and not make pet adoption harder or more serious than legislation, or human rights, or the Gospel.

2 comments:

  1. Haha. So you want a dog, eh? You can have ours for a little while when the baby's born!

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  2. hahaha this made me laugh the hardest.

    things to remember:
    1. we are from alabama- where ANYTHING is possible.
    2. my grandmother used to hide exlax in hotdogs and feed them to her neighbors dogs to make them sick and keep them from coming around. this i know for sure. hardcore poisoning is highly suspect.
    3. what are you doing when you get back?
    4. we should catch up
    5. i get dog and house and... get this, baby fever a lot. so i understand.

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