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More Real Hearts Opened By Pets — Storm & Mauve

November 30, 2007 | 2:41 pm

P.A.W.S. (Poundhounds Animal Welfare Society, http://www.ohiopoundhounds.com) forwarded to me an email from Thomas Smith, along with two great pictures that perfectly illustrate integrating pets into the family and holiday season. I wanted to share it with pet lovers and those who are thinking of adding a dog to their family this holiday season. Thomas gave his permission for me to print his letter and photos.
 

dogs

Storm and Mauve
 

Hello PAWS,
          My fiance, Brandi, and I adopted Storm, an Italian Greyhound/Whippet mix, a month in a half ago. Just to keep you updated, he is getting along great with us. He and our beagle/whippet mix, Mauve, spend all their time either playing, sleeping or eating, and always together. He does not try to run away from us, even on the rare occasion that he has the chance. Storm does chase our cat once in a while, but just to play, not to be aggressive, and he’s gotten better about that after a couple swipes to the nose by the cat. He does chew on anything and everything, but Mauve is usually the instigator. Storm goes in his crate willingly while we’re away at school/work, does not bark and has not gone to the bathroom in our house at all. There have been a few occasions when we haven’t had the time to let the dogs play outside or take them for long walks, but they wear themselves out by wrestling inside. Both dogs get jealous of getting attention, even when they’re both being given attention at the same time, and it always ends up in the dogs romping through the house in play.
          Mauve was also a rescue dog and is shy around strange males due to her past, but Storm is not shy around anyone and, in prompting competition for the attentions of everyone, Mauve has become less shy as well. Storm has noticeably gained weight and gotten taller since we adopted him, and all that playing has made Mauve put on some muscle too! All-in-all, when we’re all relaxing on the couch in the evening, it almost always looks like he is smiling, and he has become an absolute joy to have in our family.
 
          Attached are a couple of photos of the two dogs–one of them in Halloween costumes (Brandi insisted) and the other of them curled up on the floor together, which inevitably happens when they get too tired to wrestle any longer.

pets in costume
Storm and Mauve in their Halloween costumes.

          Thanks so much for Storm, after only a month we couldn’t imagine not having him as part of our family.
Thomas Smith
          If YOU are thinking of adding a dog to your family, be sure to check out the free handout, “Checklist Before Getting an Animal Pal,” available at http://www.dreamtimepublishing.com/ (scroll down the right side of the books page to find the “More Info and Free Downloads on Books” button). Have a great time preparing for the holiday season with your family and PETS!
—Janice Phelps, Author of Open Your Heart with Pets
 

Posted by: Opening the heart — jphelps | Comments (0)


Learn How to Get Your Spiritual Writing Published, Part Three

November 25, 2007 | 2:18 am

You’ve decided you want to write, and you know it’s for all the right reasons: You’re truly inspired and want to share your words with others (see parts one and two of this series on this blog).

Now what?

How do you actually get started? How do you overcome the blank piece of paper and the hopelessly white computer screen?

Try writing a “Dear Reader” letter. Imagine what your ideal reader looks like, and then write a letter to that person, letting your thoughts flow. What do you want to say? This technique will help get you started and get the words moving.

Posted by: writing, writing books, Publishing, Opening the heart, Learning something new — Meg | Comments (0)


Happy Thanksgiving Anyway!

November 22, 2007 | 11:55 am

I have to admit that when it comes to Thanksgiving, I’m a bit of a bah-humbug sort of person. I don’t celebrate the holiday and it makes me vaguely uncomfortable, as you’ll see in a moment.

But I do want to say that taking time off to acknowledge everything for which we are thankful is an excellent idea, and one we should implement all year, not just on one day. I’m grateful this year for Meg and for DreamTime Publishing; this company has been in existence for less than two years, and already there are a significant number of titles from which readers can choose. Meg is an amazing woman, filled with infectious joy and energy, and I am thankful, every day, that she’s in my life.

As for the rest … well, I explain my attitude best in this op-ed I wrote that appeared in last week’s Provincetown Banner:

Thanksgiving, Provincetown-Style

Having decided not to travel for the holiday (the sanest course of action when one considers how difficult flying anywhere has become), I found myself recently wondering how to spend it. While I’m totally onboard with the general sentiment of the time – it’s an incontestably Good Thing to stop and feel gratitude for all we have and all we are, and an even Better Thing to thank people who have been good to us this year – I’ve never been able to feel right about celebrating a holiday that has its historical roots in a genocide.

So how does one mark the day?

At one time the Wampanoag did a sort of anti-Thanksgiving at Plimoth Plantation, but I’ve not been able to find anything out about it in recent years. And while one could of course go to one of the local restaurants and gorge oneself, it seems a little pointless. So I was delighted when the solution was suggested to me: perhaps I should celebrate Thanksgiving exactly like the first Europeans did!

You don’t have to go far to research the roots of the holiday: the museum up at the Provincetown Monument tells the story. The Pilgrims, we learn via a diorama there, were close to starvation and despair when they suddenly found some corn! It was carefully stacked and well preserved, apparently just waiting for them. They rejoiced over that discovery, took the corn back to their ships, and thus famously survived the winter.

So here’s my plan: on Thanksgiving morning, I’m going to break into the Grand Union grocery store over on Shankpainter Road. I’m going to proceed to the canned vegetables aisle (it is, after all, past the season for fresh vegetables) and take the corn I find stacked there. Surely the store owners and the local police will understand, just as no doubt the rightful owners of that original harvest did, right? Stealing is, apparently, a holiday tradition.

Okay, so I’m not going to really do it, but it’s a tempting thought. After all, as long as you get to write the history books, you can – apparently – do whatever you want. Happy Thanksgiving!

Happy Thanksgiving indeed, on this and on every day!

— Jeannette Cézanne
http://www.JeannetteCezanne.com

Posted by: Something completely different, Opening the heart, Joy — jcezanne | Comments (0)


Jackie’s First Appearance on TV (NBC-4 Columbus, Ohio)

November 14, 2007 | 4:46 pm

Take one Chihuahua with attitude…add a bright new red collar, a slightly nervous woman in a red sweater, a gracious, open-hearted pet-loving TV interviewer, Bob Nunnally, and … voila! … Jackie is launched into the midday news at NBC 4 Columbus!

We reached the TV studio way earlier, because I kept telling my sister, Joan Phelps, “I don’t want to be late.” So we got there and had a chance to sit, and sit some more, and then Jackie was lulled to sleep in the arms of a new admirer, Amy, who works at the station. I predict she will have a small dog in her home within the next few months, but I’m not the pet psychic….

I found out that the wire for the microphone goes under your shirt. I found out that Jackie didn’t mind the bright lights (they were really really bright). I found out there are no cameramen anymore because it’s all done digitally by a guy (I’m not sure what he’s called, maybe super-camera-computer-production man) in front of a computer controlling the cameras from a desk. In fact, he was the only non-reporter in the room. I thought it took a lot more people to put on a show, and I’m sure it does, but they aren’t in the room when it happens. I guess that way there is less noise. It’s funny how many misconceptions I had about all this. As if when a book is published all those involved, including the printer, would be standing in the aisle at Barnes and Noble when you buy the book. Let’s hear it for those behind the scenes.

 A lady from Honeybaked Ham was setting up a cooking demonstration. Jackie thought her casserole smelled yummy! I started thinking of lunch.

Three minutes didn’t go by as fast as everyone said they would, but I didn’t faint, die, get an asthma attack, forget what to say, sneeze, cough, or yawn. Jackie behaved perfectly. I managed to watch the recording when I got home in High Def. Next year might see an increase in my skin care budget.

Thanks to Janice Kobi for introducing Open Your Heart with Pets to Channel 4. Thanks to Joey at Jacob Neal for doing such a great job on my hair. Thanks to Mark for moral support and making me feel so “pretty.” Thanks to Joan for going with me. Thanks to Meg Bertini for publishing Open Your Heart with Pets. I have no academy to thank… My 15 minutes of fame are over. Jackie has her treat (see photo):

 

 

Here are some links:

http://www.nbc4i.com/midwest/cmh/news/midday.html

Whew! ————— Janice Marie Phelps, Author of Open Your Heart with Pets: Mastering Life through Love of Animals

Posted by: Opening the heart — jphelps | Comments (0)


Library of America

November 13, 2007 | 7:03 pm

I just have to write about the Library of America.

It happened quite coincidentally, but I’d been working with them in another professional context — doing search engine optimization — when I began writing Open Your HEart with Reading, and the timing couldn’t have been better.

The Library of America is a nonproft publisher dedicated to publishing, and keeping in print, authoritative editions of America’s best and most significant writing.

Hailed by The New York Times Book Review as the “quasi-official national canon” of American literature, The Library of America each year adds new volumes collecting essential novels, stories, poetry, plays, essays, journalism, historical writing, speeches, and more.

A new and comprehensive series called the American Poets Project presents the most significant American poetry, selected and introduced by today’s most distinguished poets and critics, in inexpensive, elegantly designed, and textually authoritative hardcover editions.

These books are gorgeous, folks, and looking through the website is an education in American literature. Take some time to visit the Library of America and subscribe to its newsletter; if you have any interest at all in reading, you won’t be disappointed.

It was through the Library of America that I met many of the authors who today delight and amaze me. I suspect that you will find that experience true for you, also.

– Jeannette Cézanne
http://www.JeannetteCezanne.com

Posted by: reading, reading books, Opening the heart, Learning something new — jcezanne | Comments (0)


Don’t Forget Your Favorites!

November 7, 2007 | 8:50 am

I’m living in Provincetown, Massachusetts, this month: right on the tip of Cape Cod, and sometimes it feels like the tip of the world. I’m here to write, because it’s in this artists’ colony that I feel my most alive, my most creative. And what better place to write a novel about a young woman who finds herself living in the dunes for a few months?

The books that I brought with me map out my required knowledge base: World War II Day by Day (the novel takes place in 1942), The Best War Ever, Beston’s Outermost House, Art in Narrow Streets.

And then, last Saturday, what had started out in the Carribbean as Hurricane Noel and “transitioned,” to use the Weather Service parlance, into a powerful nor’easter, hit the Cape. And while I was safe in my third-floor eyrie overlooking the harbor, we did lose power for a time, and there were some very frightening moments.

And in those hours of rain hammering on the roof and wind lashing at the windows, I didn’t want to read about Cape Cod birds. I didn’t want to read about World War Two.

I wanted familiar words, soothing words, the words of an old friend. And in my efforts to be oh-so-focused on my own writing, I found that I had brought none. None of my favorite authors was there to sit with me through the stormy hours, to hold my hand, to encourage me, to allow me to lose myself in their words and slip into their reality and –– as I say in my book — fly away.

It’s a cautionary tale, people. On Sunday I trotted across the street to the library to remedy the situation; but I of all people should have known. Even traveling, even when you live in many different places, as I do, choose your companions and allow them space, always, to be with you. You won’t regret it.

– Jeannette Cézanne
http://www.JeannetteCezanne.com

Posted by: reading, reading books, Words, Opening the heart, Difficulty — jcezanne | Comments (0)


Helping Your Pet Adjust to Change

November 2, 2007 | 8:00 am

Change… Sometimes we look forward to it; sometimes we dread it. But some change is inevitable. The trick is how to integrate change into our lives in the most positive way possible. If it’s hard, if it hurts, that’s a big order; maybe, you say, an impossible order. We’ll save the most difficult-situation-you-can-imagine type of change for another day. Most of us live in the realm of “typical changes most of us encounter at some point.” How do we help our pets, who often thrive on routine, cope with change?

Coping with change begins before change is on the horizon. Change (i.e. stress, which can be positive or negative) is easier to deal with when we’ve already established a foundation of daily activity that gives our pet security and happiness. Good food, enough exercise and attention, an appropriate place to spend time while we are away (i.e., adequate cage space and toys for a bird or kong-type toys and a view out a window for a dog). Weekly habits and activities —going through the drive-through bank and getting a treat (dog), dancing and singing to CDs (parrot), being brushed, playing with an interactive toy (dog/cat)—act as a frame that encircles the being of your pet and gives boundaries and structure to its daily life. When a pet has this structure and feels loved and secure, it is easier to adapt to change.

Recently, my two dogs, Tyler (a 6-year-old Pekingese) and Jackie (a 4-year-old Chihuahua), and my parrot Gracie (a 10-year-old Maximillian Pionus) were asked to adjust to change when I married Mark Williams and we moved into his home with his dog Farley (a 4-year-old whippet/beagle mix). This move involved many changes from our pets’ point of view: sharing “mom” and “dad” with another human being, perhaps, the most significant. In the case of my dogs, it also meant moving from a house with a tiny fenced yard and an often noisy  downtown neighborhood to a villa where several friendly dogs also walk around the pretty circular street of our neighborhood, a more enclosed area. I mention this because in our former home Tyler could often hear other dogs, but seldom saw them (they were in fenced in backyards as well). He definitely seems happier and less threatened (Pekes are very territorial) in this quieter place.

There was also the presence of another dog to adjust to or, in Farley’s case, two more dogs coming into her home. She had never had to adjust to a woman being around. For Tyler and Jackie, different smells, different places to potty, a new walking routine, and a new sleeping routine (a large crate rather than in bed with me).

I’m happy to say that all three dogs have adjusted really well, as has Gracie. The changes were positive ones, but still, when change starts an animal doesn’t necessarily know all is going to be well. How can we help them face the unknown?

Mark and I found the following points good to remember in helping our pets cope with transition:

1) Identify what makes your pet happiest and be sure to keep doing these things. Each of our pets has one or more favorite activities, and we made sure they still got to do these things as often as possible. The repeat of these activities, albeit in a different location and with additional participants around, was important:

  • For Tyler this meant his favorite pink stuffed bird toy and his basket of other toys. Also, it meant being allowed to sit (properly like a little “guy”) at the table when we eat. I know this sounds odd, but we are older, there are no kids at home any longer and we like it. Tyler sits on his hind legs and puts his two front paws daintily on the edge of the table, his back a perfect ruler, and watches us while we eat and talk, knowing he, and the other two dogs, will get a small treat when we are done.
  • For Farley this has meant maintaining “cookie time.” Farley gets a large flat rawhide after dinner. That is her joy in life. The other dogs have accepted that this is her thing. They do not need it (Tyler would fight over his and Jackie at 6 lbs doesn’t need a lot of rawhide in her tummy). We’ve decided that fair is not the same as equal and we opt for fair, which is letting Farley keep her tradition. For Farley, this also means “riding in the car with Dad when he goes grocery shopping” (when weather permits). The other dogs join her in this activity, and, being a friendly dog, she is happy to have them along.
  • For Jackie, her favorite activity is sitting next to either Mark or I in the chair and being “right there.” Also, snuggling under the blanket at nap time. So, when an afternoon nap is taken, all the dogs are allowed on the bed and Jackie is allowed to be the one to snuggle under the blanket.
  • For Gracie, our parrot, shower time is important to her. I have a shower perch that I use for her and once or twice a week she joins me in the shower.
  • Walks are also important to Tyler and high-energy Farley and we have maintained this for all the dogs.

 In addition to keeping these traditions, we’ve added new activites, so — from our pets point of view — we are sure that the change of moving and marriage has been, at the end of the day, a positive experience.

1) Farley no longer has to stay home alone while Dad works. She always has someone here now to play with her and to take her out throughout the day. Also, being a friendly dog, she likes having other dogs in the house. I give credit to Farley’s open-heartedness, more than anything, for easing the transition for Tyler and Jackie.

2) Tyler, like the “little boy” that he is, loves having a “daddy.” He sits by Mark while he writes, accompanies him and Farley to the store, sits on the porch with him, and takes a position near Farley during TV time. Tyler has also joined Farley at Drummond Island chasing squirrels. And, while there, we found out that Tyler loves the water and loves to swim!

3) Jackie has benefited by having another person to hold her. That is all that matters to her. Being a little dog, she has been slowest to accept sharing me and Mark with Farley. But every day she opens her heart a bit more and they are becoming friends.

There is so much more going on in the activity of a family than there was in a single-person home, and the pets benefit from this as well. Their lives are more interesting. It may not be that way for other singles, but I am a person who spends a lot of the day sitting at the computer writing, and this can’t be too much fun for dogs. Now, they have more to do. They have a more interesting neighborhood to take their walks in. They lost a fenced back yard, but gained a screened porch. Gracie went from a room with other parrots (three of our parrots were rescued parrots that homes have been found for) to being right in the center of family life with her cage in the large space that is dining room/living room/kitchen. She loves it.

I thought my dogs would miss our former home, but it seemed that once I said “I do,” they said “We do too!” and never really wanted to return to their old home. When I took them with me one time at the end of the moving process, they viewed the house, it seemed to me, about as I did: Well, this was a nice old house, it looks familar, but it’s not home any longer. Thanks for the memories—let’s go home!

There have been a few bumps. I had tried to adopt an older dog earlier in the year, and this resulted in a serious dog bite for me and three fights for Tyler. But Jackie seemed to suffer the most enduring fear aggression from that experience. I think that’s why it’s taken longer for her to warm up to Farley. Farley is a talkative dog, and Jackie just can’t figure out what that barking means. Also, Jackie personifies that dog-lovers T-shirt that says, “If it was once mine, it’s mine. If I like it, it’s mine. If it is yours, it’s mine!”

If you are facing change, such as a move, the addition of a child or spouse, a change in job hours, an illness or operation that might limit your activities, spend some time identifying the most important habits/routines in the life of your pet so that you can do your best to keep that frame (structure) around their being (existence). There should be about five:

1) When and what does he eat?

2) What is his favorite playtime activity? What is his favorite toy?

3) Who are his favorite people and/or animal friends? Keep them visiting if possible. If not, set up positive situations with new friends.

4) What is his exercise routine? How does he get his energy out?

5) What is his favorite bonding-time or quiet-time routine (i.e. brushing, napping on the bed, sitting on your lap when you watch TV, taking a shower/bath in the case of a bird)?

By establishing a good foundation, noting what makes your pet happy, and then keeping those important things on-going in the midst of change, your pet will continue to be a happy member of your family.

Carpe Diem!

Janice Marie Phelps, Author of “Open Your Heart with Pets”

Posted by: Opening the heart — jphelps | Comments (0)


National Literacy Day

November 1, 2007 | 9:26 am

Just a quick note today to remind everyone that today is National Literacy Day, so it’s a great time to do something simple: give a child a book by visiting the Literacy Site today.

With the holidays coming, you might also want to consider patronizing some of the advertisers on the site, too, and shop for some of your holiday gifts there.

Check out this Squidoo lens for LitLife, another program that’s easy to get involved with. And there are scores more, some of them highlighted in my book, Open Your Heart with Reading. The point isn’t which group you help, but that you help someone; because in the end, do we really want to live in an illiterate society? Call it enlightened self-interest. Call it kindness. Call it caring. Just do it!

One-third of all Americans, 90 million people, are functionally illiterate. We should be ashamed. On this day of all days, let’s do something about it!

– Jeannette Cézanne
www.JeannetteCezanne.com

Posted by: reading, reading books, Opening the heart, Joy, Overcoming difficulty, Overcoming obstacles — jcezanne | Comments (0)

 
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