Here's a great article that I thought I would pass on...hope you find it interesting! –Kim
To Save Animals, You Have to Like People
by Anne ReedFeb. 25, 2013
"Boy, I hate people."
I hear that all the time from people who work in animal welfare. I disagree.
I understand why they feel that way. When you do this work, you hear stories all the time that make you angry. Abuse and neglect. Domestic violence. Well-meaning stupidity. Even the simple failure to stick with commitments: "I'm moving out of town, so I need to surrender my 12-year-old dog."
These stories would make anyone mad, let alone someone who cares enough about animals to have chosen shelter work over other, almost certainly better-paying, options.
But here's the catch, and it's a big one. The only way you can save homeless animals is by liking people. By trusting people, welcoming people, inspiring people, and helping people keep their own animals and adopt more.
This insight is the core of a fundamental shift in animal welfare work in recent years. Like most powerful insights, it grabs you the minute you get it. Think about it: can you save the lives of more animals....
Liking people has saved hundreds of thousands of animals' lives across the country.
Here's one more thing that happens when an animal shelter decides to like people: we find compassion for some of the things that made us angry in the first place. Not all, but many. The family whose dog's behavior problems got worse after they used an electric shock collar; they had the wrong information, and they didn't know. The couple who doesn't think they're giving their dog enough attention now that they've had a baby; they're exhausted, and worried. The family who is moving; they've both lost their jobs, and don't know what lies ahead.
From this place of compassion, we find that we often can actually help them, and help their animals. When we're not judging people, we can find ways to open their minds to possibilities and ideas.
The only way to help animals is to like people.
(Our pro-people approach is especially helpful when we need to find a home for an animal with special challenges, like adorable Shelby, in the picture. She's unbelievably cute, but easily stressed, so we have her in a foster home, instead of in the shelter, and it will take longer for her to find an adoptive family there. Our pro-adoption philosophy is one of the key tools that allows us to give her, and every animal in our adoption program, as long as it takes.)
I hear that all the time from people who work in animal welfare. I disagree.
I understand why they feel that way. When you do this work, you hear stories all the time that make you angry. Abuse and neglect. Domestic violence. Well-meaning stupidity. Even the simple failure to stick with commitments: "I'm moving out of town, so I need to surrender my 12-year-old dog."
These stories would make anyone mad, let alone someone who cares enough about animals to have chosen shelter work over other, almost certainly better-paying, options.
But here's the catch, and it's a big one. The only way you can save homeless animals is by liking people. By trusting people, welcoming people, inspiring people, and helping people keep their own animals and adopt more.
This insight is the core of a fundamental shift in animal welfare work in recent years. Like most powerful insights, it grabs you the minute you get it. Think about it: can you save the lives of more animals....
- By screening adopters strictly and allowing only the most qualified, or by believing that most people can give an animal a loving home?
- By creating obstacles to adopting an animal that only the most dedicated family can surmount (long waits, home inspections, special requirements), or by making it easy to bring a homeless animal into one's life?
- By assuming every animal is better off in the shelter than staying with someone who is thinking about giving them up, or by working with families to find ways they can keep their animals?
Liking people has saved hundreds of thousands of animals' lives across the country.
Shelby the Pomeranian |
From this place of compassion, we find that we often can actually help them, and help their animals. When we're not judging people, we can find ways to open their minds to possibilities and ideas.
The only way to help animals is to like people.
(Our pro-people approach is especially helpful when we need to find a home for an animal with special challenges, like adorable Shelby, in the picture. She's unbelievably cute, but easily stressed, so we have her in a foster home, instead of in the shelter, and it will take longer for her to find an adoptive family there. Our pro-adoption philosophy is one of the key tools that allows us to give her, and every animal in our adoption program, as long as it takes.)
Anne Reed is the Executive Director of the Wisconsin Humane Society. Before joining WHS, Anne spent almost three decades as a corporate litigator. As a lawyer, she was named one of the Wisconsin Law Journal's "Women In The Law" and was named to the list of "Wisconsin Superlawyers." WHS operates shelters in Milwaukee, Saukville and Racine.
Also, see:
Good Homes Need Not Apply
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