Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
1. a sentence in an interrogative form, addressed to someone in order to get information in reply.
2. a problem for discussion or under discussion; a matter for investigation.
1. of or denoting an attitude in which judgments about other people's conduct are made.
criticism - noun
Giving criticism tests your communication skills. If you do it right, you can change it from a stinging, negative message to a positive, motivating experience for every member that reads it.
You may be frustrated, angry, annoyed, peeved, apoplectic or slightly uncomfortable. But if you approach criticism with a temper or an angry demeanour, you are less likely to think straight and may say or do something you wish you hadn’t, or others to feel embarassment for you disregard for people being humans and not perfect.
Because they have failed, botched, screwed-up, or not performed to the level I expected, I have to let them know how I feel about it.
Really? Someone asking for help, asking questions, being uninformed, making a decision you necessarily don't agree with or someone just making a statement, you have to let them know about it by being critical and sometimes downright rude and mean? God help anyone with a low self-esteem.
Here are a few quotes I thought about while going through posts today..............
There are many, many, many members on DK that are awesome! Whether I agree with all of their opinions or not they handle themselves with finesse. At the end of the day doesn't everyone want to feel good about themselves and how they have treated others? As my mother ALWAYS said "It's not WHAT you say, it's HOW you say it".
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lol! well I couldn't have done it if you hadn't 'adopted' me. Does that make me your rescue daughter? ha ha.
Yes!
I admittedly am more of a lurker than a commenter and I was going to stay out of this discussion but it does seem to me that some things did need to be said. Joanne, you said what needed to be said. The poster of that discussion is making his decisions without thinking about the dog he is buying but about his own perceived needs. He wants a dog but only one that fits some idealized idea of one. What will he do if this new dog gets sick and and the insurance he promises to buy doesn't cover the costs he says he can't afford? It is only obvious to think that the money he is spending on this new pup could have gone toward the healthcare of the dog he gave away. If the care is more money than he can afford then he did the right thing giving the dog to someone who can afford it, but to buy another pup doesn't make any sense, at least not to me.
I worry that the new dog will not enjoy the fireworks with him. That was a fault of the old dog's too. Maybe breeders should start testing puppies for these things, so they can fulfill the owners' expectations better.
I'm sure there are many other things that could come up that would mess with his world. I have had dogs in the past that have needed special care for one thing or another and it always takes your time and money. So far Bo only needs some anti-anxiety pills so no big deal there. The point is that it is a commitment to own a pet, as you well know, and if he couldn't keep that commitment to one dog what makes him think he can to another. That said, I do have some sympathy for him. He seems to be in need of positive support and not able to handle anything that he perceives to be negative.
" It is only obvious to think that the money he is spending on this new pup could have gone toward the healthcare of the dog he gave away. If the care is more money than he can afford then he did the right thing giving the dog to someone who can afford it, but to buy another pup doesn't make any sense, at least not to me."
This is exactly the reason so many people are upset about it. I had a foster whose owner lost everything she had- her job, her home, her marriage, everything. She had to move cross country to her sister's home, and she could not bring the dog. She left here crying so hard that I was afraid she would have a car accident. I have all the sympathy in the world for her.
This is not about what someone had to do, it's about what someone wanted to do.
This probably doesn't belong here and is off topic but my sympathy has nothing to do with his behavior with his dog, but with a feeling I get from his past posts. Something isn't quite right......Something is missing. For that, I have some sympathy and wish him help. Not to say I'm always all there either:-)
We all felt that way, also, Charlotte, or we wouldn't have gone to the lengths we did to try to help.
But I guess all this proves the old saying that you can't help someone who doesn't really want help. None of us has a magic wand.
I just thought of the old joke. "How many psychiatrists does it take to change a light bulb? One if it want to change."
I had NO IDEA.
Jane, you responded to the discussion. Although, you must not have read he got rid of her because he could not afford her allergies? You must not have read that he bought an Australian Labradoodle Puppy?
Joanne - I had gone to bed with people asking where Jared was - and yes I was worried about him. I woke up at 2:30 a.m. (thank you menopause) clicked on DK and just saw that he was back. I did not read what he wrote or anyone wrote. I posted my feelings at the time and went back to bed - I'll never again do that without reading through the post and the replies because the next day - it became clear that there was something horrid going on. :(
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