Taking Care Of Our Pets - Also In Difficult Times

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Taking Care Of Our Pets - Also In Difficult Times For most owners their pet is like another child – an additional family member. So the pet should receive the same amount of attention and care that the rest of the household is entitled to. This applies to all situations and circumstances, be they good or less favorable. The pet needs not only food and water, or a safe place to sleep, comfort and attention; it also needs you when it feels unwell and needs the intervention of a vet, for medical care or simply for a routine check-up to make sure all is well with the animal. Pet owners know, too, that their animals exhibit a range of emotions, right from being happy (think of a smile on their face and a wagging tail) to being sad (drooping face and unhappy body language). Animals also pick up on their owners’ emotional life and react to what they feel and understand about humans’ emotional well-being. They know when you’re happy, when you’re sad, when you’re worried. During periods that the owner is un-well or sick, the animal will try and offer comfort, lie by your feet, follow you around. It is therefore a two-way street, one that the owner or human is in control of: be mindful of your pets’ emotions and how they react to yours. People get sick; they get worried. Take, for example, prolonged periods such as recuperating from an operation, or a threatening illness such as cancer, or the flu, or the new fear on everybody’s lips: the corona virus. People who get this flu will rely on their family and friends to offer whatever support they can; a loving pet will indeed do their part too and offer comfort. For many owners there is an additional worry: will my pets be safe during this terrible time, whether or not I develop the illnesses related to the virus? Many may worry that pets may get it too. How will that impact the animal, and the owner’s relationship with the pet? The good news is that there is absolutely no evidence that one’s pets – cats and dogs – will get the virus and suffer from it, or infect the owners. But, as is the case with handling anything during the time of corona: always wash your hands after contact with the pet. It remains good practice for all. Make sure you wash and bathe your animal regularly as you always would anyway. Of course corona brings in other dimensions into one’s home life. In many countries the world all over their is the real threat of the so-called “lockdown” which can last for weeks, a time of social distancing and the minimum contact with others. This also means that, depending on which state or country you live in, you may not be able to take your dog for a walk or a run in the park or out in the open. Pets, like humans, will be hemmed in, and it may


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