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An Open Letter to Mr. and Mrs. Average Pet Owner
Dear Mr. and Mrs. Average Pet Owner: Thank you for contacting us animal rescuers, shelter volunteers, and foster-homes about your inability to keep your pet. We receive an extremely high volume of inquiries and requests to accept surrendered animals (and none of us are getting paid, OK?). To help us expedite your problem as quickly as possible, please observe the following guidelines: 1. Do not say that you are "CONSIDERING finding a good home" for your pet, or that you, "feel you MIGHT be forced to," or that you "really THINK it would be better if" you unloaded the poor beast. Ninety-five percent of you have already got your minds stone-cold made up that the animal WILL be out of your life by the weekend at the latest. Say so. If you don't, I'm going to waste a lot of time giving you common-sense, easy solutions for very fixable problems, and you're going to waste a lot of time coming up with fanciful reasons why the solution couldn't possibly work for you. For instance, you say the cat claws the furniture, and I tell you about nail-clipping and scratching posts and aversion training, and then you go into a long harangue about how your husband won't let you put a scratching post in the family room, and your ADHD daughter cries if you use a squirt bottle on the cat, and your congenital thumb abnormalities prevent you from using nail scissors and etc., etc. Just say you're getting rid of the cat. 2. Do not waste time trying to convince me how nice and humane you are. Your coworker recommended that you contact me because I am nice to animals, not because I am nice to people, and I don't like people who "get rid of" their animals. "Get rid of" is my least favorite phrase in any language. I hope someone "gets rid of" YOU someday. I am an animal advocate, not a people therapist. After all, for your ADHD daughter, you can get counselors, special teachers, doctors, social workers, etc. Your pet has only me, and people like me, to turn to in his or her need, and we are unpaid, overworked, stressed-out, and demoralized. So don't tell me this big long story about how, "We love this dog so much, and we even bought him a special bed that cost $50, and it is just KILLING us to part with him, but honestly, our maid is just awash in dog hair every time she cleans, and his breath sometimes just reeks of liver, so you can see how hard we've tried, and how dear he is to us, but we really just can't . . ."You are not nice, and it is not killing you. It is, in all probability, literally killing your dog, but you're going to be just fine once the beast is out of your sight. Don't waste my time trying to make me like you or feel sorry for you in your plight.
3. Do not try to convince me that your pet is
exceptional and deserves special treatment. I don't care if you taught
him to sit. I don't care if she's a beautiful Persian. I have a
waiting list of battered and/or whacked-out animals who need help, and I
have no room to foster-house your pet. Do not send me long messages
detailing how Fido just l-o-v-e-s blankies and carries his favorite
blankie everywhere, and oh, when he gets all excited and happy, he spins
around in circles, isn't that cute? He really is darling, so it wouldn't be any trouble
at all for us to find him a good home. Listen, we can go down to the pound
and count the darling, spinning, blankie-loving beasts on death row by
the dozens, any day of the week. And, honey, Fido is a six-year-old Shepherd-Lab mix.
I am not lying when I tell you that big, older, mixed-breed,garden-variety dogs
are almost completely unadoptable, and I don't care if they can whistle Dixie
or send semaphore signals with their blankies. What you don't realize is that,
though you're trying to lie to me, you're actually telling the truth:
Your pet is a special, wonderful, amazing creature. But this mean old world does not
care. More importantly, YOU do not care, and I can't fix that problem. Author Unknown, but could be any shelter worker or rescuer.
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