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Author Topic: Old Folks with GrandPuppies - no grandkids  (Read 899 times)

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Offline Matthew

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Old Folks with GrandPuppies - no grandkids
« on: April 04, 2011, 11:08:07 AM »
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  • (CNN) -- Some people have grandchildren, others have grandpuppies.

    "For years, we didn't have any grandchildren and my daughter's dog, Mr. Moose, was all we had," said 63-year-old Eileen Williams of the San Francisco Bay area.

    "You take what you get in life and make the most of it, and we've been pleased he has been a huge part of our family over the years, as our grandpuppy."

    Another grandpuppy-parent, 52-year-old Rhonda Shew of Nanaimo, British Columbia, says she has been patiently waiting for grandkids but is satisfied with her two grandpuppies for now.

    "I spoil them with dog treats, breath mints and clothes," she said. "We even gave them their own Facebook pages," she said with a chuckle.

    Social networking for our pets? Why do we humans like to impose human characteristics on animals?

    "The ability to put yourself in another person's shoes is important in a species as social as our," said psychology professor Harold Herzog of Western Carolina University.

    "What seems to happen is that we use this tendency to project human mental states into other creatures. It is particularly easy to do this in our pets because we have come to think of them as family members," says the professor.

    Evolutionary biologists say the relationship between humans and dogs dates back at least 14,000 years ago -- and dogs have lived in close association with humans longer than any other domestic animal.

    So perhaps the evolution of grandpuppy status is not such a far-fetched progression between man and his best friend.

    "When we look at the evolution of the dog from protector, hunter, to companion, it may not be so unlikely for the dog to appear in the 'family tree,' " said Dr. Rebecca Johnson, director of the Research Center for Human-Animal Interaction at University of Missouri College of Veterinary Medicine.

    Since women in today's society are waiting a bit later to have children, granddogs "may play a family role somewhat like a child," notes Johnson.

    These furry creatures apparently offer some of the healthiest relationships in a family, too.
    A grandpuppy is a canine member of the family that provides unconditional love...
    --Dr. Rebecca Johnson

    "A grandpuppy is a canine member of the family that provides unconditional love, diversion, something to talk about, a reason to exercise (dog walking), a source of relaxation and stress relief," said Johnson.

    Perhaps it's not surprising then that grandpuppy-parents will go to any measure to bond with their four-legged family members, even if it's a long-distance relationship. Take 86-year-old Dolores Corley and her husband, 85-year-old Ralph. They interact with their grandpuppy, Gracie, via Skype.

    "Since we live in St. Louis and our grandpuppy lives in Atlanta, we find using Skype a great way to keep up with Gracie -- and of course our daughter Maureen, too," said Dolores.

    "It's fun to see Gracie, a Boxer Terrier mix, on the computer screen since we rarely get to visit with her in person."

    In addition to connecting with grandpuppies online, a connection with these canines has evolved in the retail market, as well. Clothing, dog bowls, note cards, mouse pads, coffee cups and coasters with "grandpuppy" images on them are among the items dog lovers can purchase for themselves and their pooches.

    "It's a popular product, and we sell more than 1,000 grandpuppy designs on our website," said Mike Karns, marketing director of a company called zazzle.com.

    Khris Klaich owns a pet gift store in Buffalo, New York, and he says customers ask him "all of the time" if he carries grandpuppy products.

    Others are more skeptical of the shelf-life of these retail items.

    "The proliferation of grandpuppy merchandise is a great example of an animal fad," Herzog said. "Some of these become part of the culture, and some just disappear," he noted.

    "It's hard to say if people will be talking about their grandpuppies 10 years from now."

    But for now, a growing segment of people are talking about their grandpuppies -- and with passionate conviction.
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    Offline Matthew

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    Old Folks with GrandPuppies - no grandkids
    « Reply #1 on: April 04, 2011, 11:10:30 AM »
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  • Pathetic is the first word that comes to mind.

    An older couple 85 and 86 should have a lot more than a random dog for "grandchildren".

    They're reaping the fruit of their own actions, what they believed in, and how they raised their children.

    The fact that this 85-year-old couple is sitting on Skype looking at a dog across the country, counting it as a "grandchild" shows how insane this couple is going. It must really mess with your head.
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    Offline CathMomof7

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    Old Folks with GrandPuppies - no grandkids
    « Reply #2 on: April 04, 2011, 12:16:05 PM »
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  • Quote
    Since women in today's society are waiting a bit later to have children, granddogs may play a family role somewhat like a child


    God has placed on most people's hearts the desire to have and love children.  There are so many stories in the Holy Scripture and throughout history of a couple's longing for children.  Many women have fallen into deep despair because they were barren.  

    Thanks to our culture's birth control mentality, barrenness is now desired, sought after, and encouraged.  

    This sickness of replacing children with animals is one of the evil consequences of it.  Some others are those weird "human-looking" dolls women buy, and the fascination with chimps.

    Rather than offer these families spiritual guidance or counseling, individuals and businesses are indulging their fancies and profiting off their insanity.

    What is even sadder is that people are hateful, rude, and offended at the sight of a family with several children, but laugh and smile at the people with their dogs dressed up like ballerinas.
     

    Offline Sigismund

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    Old Folks with GrandPuppies - no grandkids
    « Reply #3 on: April 04, 2011, 08:13:29 PM »
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  • Pathetic indeed.  I like dogs, and have two of them.  I like my grandchildren, and I have to stop and think about exactly how many I have.  I certainly don't confuse the two, and I certainly know what matters more.
    Stir up within Thy Church, we beseech Thee, O Lord, the Spirit with which blessed Josaphat, Thy Martyr and Bishop, was filled, when he laid down his life for his sheep: so that, through his intercession, we too may be moved and strengthen by the same Spir