Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
I would say Natalie is magnetized by the definition in this woman's article.
http://dogsandbabies.wordpress.com/2011/01/24/mamas-dont-let-your-b...
But...I'm not sure I have any ideas for how to strike a balance. Knives don't walk around the house and approach and follow you from room to room. What do the rest of you think about this woman's perspective and how to achieve a balance?
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Adina, thanks for posting this. I am a mother of a three year old and a 9 month old and most recently a 9 week old doodle. I didn't just read the original link, but I read the whole series. Although her examples are a little extreme, her conclusion was very sensitive and celebrated the relationship kids can have with dogs. It is going to be hard to strike a balance, my nine month old might be in the process of being "magnetized" so I am going to be more conscious of that. My three year old isn't that much - he likes Georgia the doodle to play with him and lick him, but he can easily ignore her too. That is probably a product of him having our Lab cross in his life from day one, she was gentle to a fault but kept to herself, so Reagan (the toddler) didn't get accustomed to playing with her. Sadly we lost her to cancer last year.
I can see how Dylan (my baby) would get "magnetized" by Georgia, she really does look like a stuffed animal that moves at this point. I'll have to regulate that. Obviously we are already totally focused on not allowing Georgia to jump/lick/get too close to the baby and learn her place on the totem pole.
So although extreme, it provides good food for thought for me - despite having been raised with dogs my entire life and definitely being "magnetized" myself by cats and dogs since infancy.
I don't have kids yet, but our niece and nephew have helped us prep for how to handle the dogs around our kids. They both don't have dogs in the house, so they are even more drawn to Taquito and Peri. The 2 year old calls T. a "kitty" and chases him. He doesn't get the "be gentle", "approach slowly" thing... The girl, on the other hand, is approaching 4 and gets it. When she was two, I left the room and she ran up to Tacky and pulled his ear. T. had had enough (parents repeatedly told Sophia to be gentle, but never really did much to stop her). Tacky bit her nose (gently, didn't break skin). Ever since then, she is so careful with Tacky and gets how you should approach a dog. She is the same with Peri (although Peri would let you run all over her).
I guess what I think I will do with our future kids is to start from the getgo telling them to approach slowly and gently with our dogs and to be careful/don't approach animals you don't know when mom is not around. That's what my parents did with us and we always had dogs. Longest time without was a few months.
On another note, I don't think I am going to read any parenting books. Maybe some pregnancy or baby books but not parenting. Mom and dad never read those and at 29, I think it is pretty safe to say that they did an excellent job raising us and if I could mimic them, I would.
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