Tag Archives: humans

Corporate Care

I awaken at or about 3:00 in the morning. It used to be the time I wrote my best ideas, left them on a pad on my nightstand, and went back to sleep with my cats at my feet.

Oh, those warm fuzzies. Now it’s more nightmare time. Our hipless wonder dog jumps off the bed as soon as she sees sunlight or I turn on the television. She burrows underneath the bed, beneath my pillow, so I cannot go anywhere without her knowledge and approval. TV on, I only see ads to send one’s elderly parents to “caring” facilities that may or may not accept Medicare.

Today I’ve a private pet-sitter who will take good care of our dog. I also have a vet and other contacts for emergency information and care. Then I went to a corporate pet day care and overnight operation. Their questions are intrusive. They require a trainer-conducted supervisory visit then say anything that happens is my and my dog’s fault.

What ever happened to customer service? I lease an expensive apartment and they tell me what to do. I have a maid and she tells me what she’ll do and how she needs to be paid. I’ve a vet assistant who tells me to follow my dog around with a ladle, catch her pee and refrigerate it then take it in within 24 hours to be scanned, and don’t worry, I don’t have to bother the vet. Bother my vet? Please.

I’m hiring you. I tell you what I want and pay you for it. If I want the walls green, please don’t paint them blue then tell me to get out of the house for 12 hours and pay you cash for what you did wrong.

People around here like us and our old dog. We don’t ask much of anyone, although I would love to go back to the days when we never locked the house or cars, and dogs could run after a ball or stick without a $290 ticket.

Forgive me if I’d rather deal with individuals than corporations. Yes, I may be hurt from time to time but tend to be a good judge of character. When I hire someone, individual or corporation, I set the rules. Dee

Pointers

Yes, you’ve all been to a museum and seen a painting of a Pointer showing it’s owner/handler the location of the prey so that it can be flushed out by the Retriever. I think that’s how hunting goes, but failed riflery at age 12.

This is actually about pointing. While preparing dinner I heard the audio and missed the video of a science show that was talking about pointing.

It said that children learn it early, dogs understand it but primates do not.

The key to this is that they say pointing is essential to teamwork, and we’re all about that. I point, you look at me, look at the direction to which I am pointing and voila, we just saw the bear or lion that’s come to kill us. Teamwork.

Think about it. Laser pointers, Kanban boards. It’s all about pointing. If I throw a ball for my dog and she’s busy meeting a new dog, I just point at it and she goes and gets it. For my old dog, she didn’t like balls at first so I had to start out by tossing her favorite stuffed animal. As she got older she knew every car in the neighborhood so when my sister visited she heard the diesel engine and had a basket full of stuffed animals and would go crazy finding the right one with which to greet her!

I adopted another flawed (had to take out her hips) dog for the past ten years and she loves chasing a ball but nothing like a tennis ball or stuffed animal can be left anywhere near her at home because she’ll tear it apart in seconds.

Primates cannot point? I find that unusual and must look it up further. I do get the teamwork philosophy. Write back and I’ll look at what you want me to….. Point taken, Dee