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Why Smart Pet Owners Read Books On Animal Communication

By John Kennedy


Television these days loves to push so-called pet whisperers on us. The idea is that, when we do A, then the poor furry little litter-box avoider does B because we were not sensitive to the non-verbal ways it was letting us know that our bathroom rug is the only appropriate place for bodily waste. Now, one should not call charlatan too quickly, but perhaps those whispering experts of the furry kingdom should sit down and read some books on animal communication.

Very few of us will ever invite one of these masters of canine telepathy into our personal mess. Few can afford to receive instruction on how to accommodate what may be totally nonexistent emotional needs that their pets are probably not trying to voice to them at all. It might make a little more sense, and be a better use of time, to simply read about the basic sounds that animals make to express their varied emotional states.

How many people know that when a cat squints at you slowly, they are showing a sign of affection. In fact, this show of affection is done absent of the usual feline display of submission. The usual submissive pose is also a sign of affection, but it is not as intense or personal as the slow, two-eyed squint.

A point of much hostility to cat people is the random and unexpected reach out and bite their feline so loves to do. This is actually an expression of physical intimacy, having the basis of this behavior entrenched in instinctive mating behaviors. Yes, cats look like they are fighting when they are actually, um, not fighting.

Everyone has seen video of dogs who can say hello, thank you, or I love you. Few people are aware that the best friend of man will, at times, attempt to imitate human sounds in an attempt to quarry their favor. You see, there is nothing in this world that a good dog loves more than pleasing the human who heads the pack it belongs to.

Something as simple as a For Dummies type book can teach a family more about their pet in half an hour than seven hours of a pet whisperer marathon. Learning the noises and cues that our furry brethren use to communicate with one-another can help us to understand our pets. The truth is, we actually use some of the same grunts, growls, and mumbling that many members of the so-called animal kingdom use.

Children should learn to distinguish between a playful growl or a warning sound as soon as possible. Well, they probably will when they pull those long, furry ears for the last time, and the warning sound will remain in their experience forever. Still, teaching them that kitty cat makes a hiss when mad and a meow when glad just might help give that miniature human a little heads-up.

Parents can easily make a bed-time game out of the sounds that animals make, and this time it does not have to have anything to do with Old MacDonald and his terrible song. Kids love to mimic creatures in their movements as well as their noises. When we teach our toddlers the meaning of certain growls or whines, we help them to have a pet that will not run away from them until they reach their teens.




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