Holiday Catalog Offers Free Gifts

 
I recently told you about this amazing holiday catalog with products you have never seen before.  It’s called the Spirit of the Season Catalog, a transformational way of gift giving.  www.spiritoftheseasoncatalog.com. Now, if you subscribe to the mailing list, you’ll get a free gift – 11 Inexpensive Holidays Gifts You Can Make – it’s a perfect way to take care of those last minute gifts.  Many of the other gifts can be downloaded and emailed and are wonderful items your friends and family will enjoy.  Others must be shipped, but there’s still time.  So if you’re sick of the mall and just want to shop from home for something unique, check it out – the special gifts in the Spirit of the Season Catalog are just what you need. 

Take a look at http://www.spiritoftheseasoncatalog.com.

You’ll find gifts in the Spirit of the Season Catalog in the following categories: art, inspirational, motivational, business opps, success & wealth building, health and energy healing, Law of Attraction workshops, intuitive healing, all genres of fiction and a variety of non-fiction to empowering products that will light anyone’s life and many more too numerous to mention. 

It’s the catalog that keeps on giving throughout the season(s). Please share it with your friends, family and contacts!  Thanks so much.

http://www.spiritoftheseasoncatalog.com

Best Wishes for a Happy Holiday Season.

Almost Perfect Holidays: Keeping Holiday Homes Safe for Disabled Pets During the Festive Season

This is an excellent article and wanted to share with you, my readers.  Even if your pet is not disabled there is still great information in this article. 

Reprinted from Earthtimes.org

Owners of disabled pets are, by necessity, a bit more in tune with their home’s physical surroundings than most others. But at this festive time of year, important details may be overlooked in the rush to get the house decorated. Here are a few tips for making sure every holiday home is safe for all its residents this year.

Ferndale, PA (PRWEB) December 17, 2009 — Owners of disabled pets are, by necessity, a bit more in tune with their home’s physical surroundings than most others. But at this festive time of year, important details may be overlooked in the rush to get the house decorated. Here are a few tips for making sure every holiday home is safe for all its residents this year.

“We need to look at the ways our individual homes change over the holidays, and analyze how these changes will affect our special needs pets,” says Mary Shafer, editor of “Almost Perfect: Disabled Pets and the People Who Love Them.” (www.almostperfectbook.com) The 128-page softcover book is a new anthology of true-life tales of people who rescued animals with physical challenges, thinking they were doing the pets a favor. As it turns out, these folks realize the animals are inspirational blessings and unexpected gifts themselves.

For instance, says Shafer, everyone loves hanging decorations and making their homes beautiful. But a stray bit of heavy tinsel or garland can easily become tangled in the wheels of a mobility cart worn by pets whose partial paralysis prevents them from walking unaided. If such decorations are used, a quick sweep through the area a few times a day can ensure nothing is dragging on the floor where it can become a hazard for wheelies.

Similarly, many people re-arrange their furniture to accommodate a Christmas tree for a few weeks. It may be a greatly anticipated ritual or even a minor inconvenience for the people of the household, but such a move can drastically disorient blind pets or those with balance issues. Owners of households whose furniture gets seasonally rearranged can simply walk their blind or vertigo-challenged pet through the area, making it aware of the new traffic pattern. This will usually acclimate them to the change.

The extra foot traffic caused by holiday parties or drop-in guests can be a challenge even for non-disabled pets. But aside from common stress or anxiety issues this can cause, the extra feet and legs in normally empty rooms can turn into a dangerous obstacle course for blind pets and even those with hearing impairment, who can’t hear anyone approaching from behind. Since one can’t depend on guests who aren’t used to living around animals to be aware of small critters underfoot, it’s best to keep pets safely behind a bedroom or other door for the duration of the special event.

Many folks say, “Oh, but Fluffy is very social! She loves people.” But it’s not a matter of sociability, it’s a matter of awareness and safety. Don’t put Fluffy in a position to get inadvertently stepped on or tripped over. It’s better to avoid the potential mess, injury and uncomfortable feelings altogether by simply keeping pets and guests separate. If someone really wants to say hi to a favorite pet, offer to take them to where the animal is for a visit.

Of course, party hosts will want to make sure that sequestered pets are safe and comfortable while everyone enjoys the party. Dogs should be walked or let out immediately before the arrival of guests, and perhaps taken outside to do their business again later, if it’s a long-duration event. They should have soft, warm beds to lie on and a few favorite toys to keep them occupied. Cats should have access to a litter box, comfortable sleeping places and a toy or two. All animals, at the owners' discretion, should have a small bowl of food or at least water, and it’s a good idea to check on them once or twice while guests are visiting just to make sure everything is okay.

There will always be the inevitable mishaps; dropped and smashed glass ornaments, broken glasses, dropped ornament hangers. Though anyone with kids or pets of any sort would want to clean these accidents up immediately, there’s the need to be especially thorough around disabled pets. Air-filled tires on wheeled carts and soft paw pads are vulnerable to jagged shards missed and left behind. Also, non-sighted animals tend to walk along room perimeters more than in the open, which is where these kinds of hazards usually hide.

Of course, the usual rules apply to all pets: No people food, especially spicy things that could upset their systems; make sure any holiday plants are safe and not poisonous, or are truly out of reach of pets; and don’t leave lit candles unattended, especially around curious cats. Blind cats may be attracted by the hiss and pop of a burning wick, which could have disastrous results.

“Really, the best thing to do is just make sure your pet is aware of the changes you make in their surroundings. And be sure to spend time acclimating them to an acceptable level of comfort,” says Shafer. “Then the holidays can be safe and enjoyable for everyone.”

“Almost Perfect,” published by Enspirio House, an imprint of Word Forge Books, retails for $12.95 and is available online at www.almostperfectbook.com, by toll-free phone order at 888-320-9673 or from local booksellers.

8 Therapy Dogs Plus Two Little Girls Equals Joy

 
Every third Tuesday of the month Frankie and I attend a therapy dog meeting at Sharon S. Richardson Hospice, where we are also volunteers.  We get all the dogs together (oh, and the humans too!) where we talk about our experiences, do a little training, ask questions and do visits with the patients.
After doggie Christmas cookies were handed out during our December meeting this past week and some clicker training learned, we were eager to make some visits.  LuAnn and Sophie, who is a tiny little Yorkshire Terrier, and the best dressed among the dogs, are a very dedicated team at hospice.  They visit twice a week so they get to know some of the patients very well.  LuAnn shared with us that a young mom was waiting for us to visit.
Just hearing her say, “young mom” had my heart flutter with sadness.  LuAnn introduced each team and the young mom grinned bigger and bigger as each dog pranced up to her bed.  She told us that her girls, age 8 & 9 love dogs and were coming to visit her that evening.  They were first performing in their Christmas concert, but would be coming for a visit afterward.  She asked if we could all wait 15-minutes to surprise her girls.
A half hour went by and still no girls.  She felt bad we had to wait.  So she began video-taping each of the teams to share with her daughters.  I thought, it just isn’t the same, and was hoping with all my might the girls would magically appear soon.  And just as the taping began, they walked into the room with their Dad and Grandma!
The smiles on their faces and the excitement in their voices was the best gift ever!  It was as if it was Christmas morning and all their gifts were waiting for them as they came into the room.  Tails were wagging, girls were squealing, and parents and grandma had gleams of joy in their eyes.
It was a magical time as no sadness filled that room.  Only the simplicity of the human-animal connection.  The girls went from dog to dog, petting and cooing at each… and I realized that it was if the dogs all represented a reindeer.
Now Karma!  now, Stuart!  now Sophie and Ruby!  On, Kia!  On, Miley!  on Frankie and Martin!  To the young girls!  To each give them a kiss!  Now love them!  Now love them!  Love them forever!
One of the girls, Ellie, then recognized Frankie and excitedly said, “This dog has a book about her!”  And her sister, Renee, chimed in realizing it also, as the “awww” chorus followed as they bent down to pet Frankie.  I thought my heart was going to leap right out of my chest in that moment.  I quickly handed Frankie’s leash to LuAnn and whispered, “I’ll be right back.”  I couldn’t help but run out to my car, grab a copy of Frankie’s book, and gift one to each of them.  They were delighted!
Then, Stuart, a standard poodle, who knows oodles of tricks, became the center of attention, along with Ellie and Renee as they learned how to train a dog.  They helped Stuart with stay, sit, come and eventually how to circle around behind each of them.  The look of accomplishment in each of their beautiful eyes was priceless.
We each eventually made our way of the room that night, silent in our own thoughts.  As I drove home, Frankie perched beside me in her doggie car seat, I felt like Santa Claus with my little reindeer, Frankie, who delivered the best gift of all.  Moments of joy and love to a family who is hanging on to each precious moment…because it is all that we have… and all that truly matters.
I asked God to Bless this lovely family and didn’t ask “why” but tried to find peace and acceptance in what I cannot always understand.  And I then thanked Him again for all that He has blessed me with.
The names of the girls have been changed to protect their privacy.