I'm not sure, but I do recall that prior to Dx of autism, she had stated publicly that her kid was an "indigo child," which more or less means she thought he was one of the X-Men.
I'm not sure, but I do recall that prior to Dx of autism, she had stated publicly that her kid was an "indigo child," which more or less means she thought he was one of the X-Men.
I dont think you are showing a lack of sympathy rather an abundance of common sense
Let's hope it's Hans Christian Andersen's Little Mermaid, not Disney's. I'd totally watch that. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Littl…
The question sounds a bit crazy to me. "Self censorship" just describes one of the requisite skills of any social animal. Of course we restrain some impulses at work. We also do that at parties, in line for coffee, at football games and while having sex.
I know, right? Artistic criticism should NOT exist!
I didn't, but thanks for clarifying. I'm sure that, at some point, this song will come on while I'm in a store or trapped in somebody else's car and I will not die if I have to listen to it. That doesn't mean that I can't laugh at her joke of a music career.
I don't know. I think maybe the world's saddest Nets fan is the one taking the picture.
I read somewhere that the baby 'started' it: "The feline free-for-all started when Teresa's baby boy Jessie pulled the cat's tail. The cat whacked Jessie in the forehead, drawing blood. Teresa's boyfriend kicked the cat away from the baby, and that's when the cat went wild."
According to the news report linked, the baby pulled the cat's tail. The cat swiped the baby's face in retaliation, and then the boyfriend kicked the cat away from the baby, and the cat got angry and started yowling and running around. Also, dispatchers confirmed that the baby did not need medical attention before…
Cats don't understand negative reinforcement the way a human would. To hit a cat as punishment is just foolish. If you kick a cat, it's going to flip out.
Dog owners always try to treat cats like dogs and wonder why it doesn't work. You can't physically harm your cat to "teach it lessons". It doesn't work.
Separate the cat and the baby and keep them separate until the cat calms down and/or eventually learns to tolerate the kid. Maybe it's a pain in the ass, but that's something you should probably consider when you decide to have both pets and children. If you can't handle the responsibility of caring for something…
It's just a suggestion, but you could maybe just try not kicking your fucking cat in the future when it doesn't act and make decisions like a tiny, furry adult human being.
www.naca.com is one place to start if you don't have much to put down, as well as look into your local states First Time Homebuyers programs, if available. Typically if you have not owned a home in 3 years or more (renters) you qualify as a first time buyer. Low rates, and deferred down payment loans are often…
Just want to say that my cat follows me and the dogs on every walk—doesn't matter how far we go. Plus, he definitely mourned the loss of his brother for weeks. Cats' personalities are subtle, unlike dogs (who seem to try to mirror their human counterparts in temperament). If you're not a needy human, a narcissist, you…
I hear it all the time, complaining that cats are not social animals, or compassionate loving pets. I have had many cats throughout my lifetime and have never experienced one who didn't love to cuddle, who didn't run to the door when I got home, who didn't snuggle with me, who didn't follow me around the house, and…
The music parodies of the not-t0-be-released-for-another-ten-months film Annie are already trickling in,
I see the largely popular misconception about cats being evil and not caring about you. Being someone who has had cats my entire life, I disagree. You have to earn a cat's love and loyalty. This to me makes the owner to pet relationship more valuable. Also, you have to learn to understand a cat's body language and…