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Your Child Brought Home a Dog
Sniff Around for Dog Events!

Promote Your Events On Beantown Dogs.
Paw here to find out how.
By Jonathan Hardcastle

Although growing up you were fortunate to have a pet friend, its loss did make you
suffer greatly and you decided not to risk exposing your kids to the same experience of
them having to cope one day with the loss of their animal friend. But, life always finds
a way to surprise you when you least expect it and one evening your son or daughter
might enter the house accompanied by a stray dog. You will probably think that this is
a very bad idea, but your son's eyes will beg you to reconsider and allow his new friend
to stay "Please, just for a few days; until we find someone who wants to adopt it."
Now you know how that story will go. The days will pass and your new visitor will
still be in your house, messing around with your shoes and licking his plate all the way
from the kitchen floor to the living-room carpet creating a mess. But when he will put
his head on your lap for you to touch it on the head, you will catch yourself smiling
and thinking that this is not a bad idea after all. Well, it is certainly not.

Researchers have found evidence suggesting that kids who grow up having a pet
companion learn a lot from this relationship. The connection formed is not only
beneficial to the animal, but also to the child. Kids that have pets become responsible
sooner and behave proactively. These are just two of the positive outcomes your child
will experience from your decision to allow a "stranger" to enter your house. The
lessons a child will learn from being close to an animal can have a tremendous effect
to its personality and behavior; today and in the future. Having to take the dog out for
a walk, visiting the veterinarian's office every six months, washing the dog or playing
with it, will not only be some of your kid's future cherished memories, but also some
rather life-changing experiences.

Only good can come out from your child learning to be respectful and affectionate to
an animal. By living with a dog, your child will for the first time in his or her life learn
what it feels like to take care of another living-soul. Moreover, the happiness and
comfort such a relationship will bring to your kid's life cannot be easily ignored or
compared with anything else he or she will later decide to experience. Respecting
someone else's needs and thinking of their well-being are extremely important lessons
for the formation of your child's future character and you will be later thanked for
being tolerant and supportive.

Do not be intimidated from the fact that your child will consider his or her new pet
friend just like he or she does with a new toy; fun and wonderful at the beginning,
annoying and boring later. This is actually your chance to teach your child what it
means to love unconditionally and to protect one's life. From the trips to the nearby
park to your family's summer vacations, your child will have a first-hand experience on
how rewarding and fulfilling it can be to cultivate such an intimate relationship and
what it entails to keep it flourishing and rewarding.

Finally, the risk of loosing the dog, or the reality that it will one day die, cannot be
underestimated. It is true that kids become psychologically attached to their pets, but
so do adults. There is no easy way to say goodbye to a beloved companion, but no
bigger lesson exists there in life. Understanding what death is, learning to accept it,
and finding ways to cope with it, are not processes one has to go through when he or
she is an adult. Perhaps then it will be too difficult for your child to become conscious
of the loss.

Pets can be the most fulfilling experience a kid can have and it is always time to open
your door and your soul to that stray dog he or she will bring in. Life gives no
guarantees that happiness and bliss will last forever. Nevertheless, your kid will
become a better individual if he or she is given a chance to experience life through the
eyes of a dog.

About The Author: Jonathan Hardcastle writes articles for http://ipetcentral.net/
Your Child Brought Home a Dog
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