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The
Backyard Dog
adapted from The American Humane Association
You see one in every community;
a dog tied day after day to a back porch or fence, lying lonely
on a pad of bare, packed dirt. The water bowl, if there is one,
is usually empty or just out of reach. Abandoned, but chained up,
backyard dogs cannot move to comfort, shelter, or companionship.
In winter they shiver, in summer they languish and year round they
suffer.
Forcing dogs to live outside, alone
and away from their human pack, is one of the worst things you can
do. Being alone goes against the dog's most basic instinct. If you
doubt this, think of all the whining, barking, howling and clawing
dogs you have seen tied alone outside. These dogs are trying desperately
to get the attention of their human families.
People who keep their dogs constantly
tied outside rationalize it, saying that they do spend time with
them. But even the most well meaning among them do not spend significant
time with their animal companions. Under the best of circumstances,
the backyard dog gets a bowl of food and water, a quick pat on the
head and maybe a few minutes of contact with another living being
each day.
Dogs can offer people the gifts
of steadfast devotion, abiding love and joyful companionship. Unless
people accept these offerings and take the time to return them in
kind, it would be best for them not to get a dog. A sad, lonely
bewildered dog tied out back only suffers, and what sort of person
wants to maintain suffering?
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