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Cruelty Free-Alcohol Free

By Kate at 5:49 am on December 7, 2007 | No comments

alcohol.jpgThe following is from a series on self-care to help you through the holidays.  So here’s wishing you a cruelty free Christmas or joyous holiday!

Avoid alcohol.  If you struggle at all with depression, avoid alcohol during the holidays.  Alcohol is a depressant and you’ll only feel worse.  If you’re invited to a party where you think people will be drinking, plan on making it a short visit and brings something that can pass for a drink.  I love to drink sparkling water with a twist of lime.  While alcohol can be sort of fun, for some people it’s addictive, and for others it increases depression.

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Cruelty Free-Focus on Faith

By Kate at 3:43 pm on December 4, 2007 | No comments

815712_fireworks.jpgDuring the holiday season I’m presenting a series of short articles on self-care.  While this may seem like a departure from animal welfare issues the two are related.  The more love and compassion we hold for ourselves, the more we can share compassion with all forms of life.  So here’s wishing you a cruelty free Christmas or joyous holiday!

Focus on Faith.  Regardless of your beliefs, Christmas is a great reminder to focus on our spiritual path.  Consider reading a book from another religion.  I find reading Jewish and Buddhist literature helpful in my faith.  It may help you understand the correlation between religions as well as provide some insight into the beliefs of other people.

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Cruelty Free-It’s Just Another Day.

By Kate at 3:42 pm on December 2, 2007 | No comments

tree1.jpgDuring the holiday season I’m presenting a series of short articles on self-care.  While this may seem like a departure from animal welfare issues the two are related.  The more love and compassion we hold for ourselves, the more we can share compassion with all forms of life.  So here’s wishing you a cruelty free Christmas or joyous holiday!

Lower your expectations.  Television surrounds us with erroneous messages of traditional “at-home” Christmas’ with multi-generations all getting along and everyone making it home for the holidays.  It puts a lot of pressure on dysfunctional families and tragically, more people commit suicide at this time of year than any other time.

Regardless of your faith, Christmas is just another day.  It will soon be over.  If it turns out great and everyone makes it to one location that’s fantastic.  If you spend the day by yourself, make a nice meal and do something you really enjoy.  It’s only 24 hours.  If it feels unbearable, find a safe place to hang out like a coffee shop, a 12-step group, or even go sit at the airport and watch people. 

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Cruelty Free-Financial Advice

By Kate at 3:37 pm on November 29, 2007 | No comments

907648_boot_prints_on_the_snow_1.jpgDuring the holiday season I’m presenting a series of short articles on self-care.  While this may seem like a departure from animal welfare issues the two are related.  The more love and compassion we hold for ourselves, the more we can share compassion with all forms of life.  So here’s wishing you a cruelty free Christmas or joyous holiday!

Give gifts that bless the universe and don’t drain your wallet.  Financial pressure often accompanies the holidays.  Many people use Christmas gifts as a chance to “prove their love” or “redeem a relationship”.  However, many gifts are free, or inexpensive and very thoughtful.  Maybe instead of by gifts for friends you can have a pot luck and a “white elephant” gift exchange.  Perhaps your family will start a new tradition-no store bought gifts.  Maybe you and your partner can give each other a message or plan a romantic get away.  If money’s tight, bundle up and take a romantic walk in the woods.  No matter how much you have to give, the greatest present you can every give is your love, acceptance and compassion.

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Cruety Free-Eat Organic

By Kate at 3:27 pm on November 27, 2007 | No comments

buffalo.jpgDuring the holiday season I’m presenting a series of short articles on self-care.  While this may seem like a departure from animal welfare issues the two are related.  The more love and compassion we hold for ourselves, the more we can share compassion with all forms of life.  So here’s wishing you a cruelty free Christmas or joyous holiday!

Eat Organic.  When you feed your body food free of chemicals and antibiotics you are blessing your body, and blessing the earth.  Our bodies are the greatest machines we will ever own and yet many people balk at the cost of healthy food.  When your body is healthy your have greater endurance, your brain functions better and you learn quicker.  And, because your functioning at a higher level, it will probably be easier for you to seek better employment opportunities or make wiser decisions regarding business opportunities.

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Cruelty Free-Let Peace Begin with Me.

By Kate at 3:26 pm on November 25, 2007 | No comments

sea.jpgDuring the holiday season I’m presenting a series of short articles on self-care.  While this may seem like a departure from animal welfare issues the two are related.  The more love and compassion we hold for ourselves, the more we can share compassion with all forms of life.  So here’s wishing you a cruelty free Christmas or joyous holiday!

Let peace begin with me.  Too often we think we need to fix others to change the world when in fact the only thing we truly have power over is ourselves.  Today, when you feel the urge to help someone else stop to consider if you might be trying to avoid your own feelings, some unfinished work, or some anxiety.  There is nothing wrong with helping others, in fact, it’s extending your compassion to others is to be admired.  However, if you help others so that you can avoid our own life, you are missing out on the greatest part of your own journey.

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Crimes, Drugs and Sentencing. How can we protect the innocent?

By Kate at 5:00 am on October 1, 2007 | No comments

girldog.jpgRecently, Michael Vic, who plead guilty to involvement in dog fighting operation was ordered to undergo drug testing.  He failed.  Last year, a vibrant young woman in my hometown suffered a violent death because she sympathetically opened her door to a stranger.  The stranger happened to be coming down from his dose of crack (cocaine).

Obviously the victims of crime suffer the same loss whether or not the perpetrator was using drugs or not.  So to be fair there should be mandatory sentences for anyone who commits a violent crime.  On the other hand there are many who would argue that individuals suffering from addictions such as an alcoholic or drug addict should receive lighter sentencing because they are powerless over the drug.

I see both sides of the argument and offer a further insight.  I’m sure this will sound “Pollyannaish” to some but I do not believe a conscious person can commit an act of violence.  I think anyone who beats kills or rapes another person is disconnected and insane while the violence occurs.   
My belief is that we need to do more to insure children experience a loving, supportive world during their formative years.  How will we achieve this?  I do not know.  I know our prisons are full of people who wear masks because they do not know what it feels like to be nurtured and accepted.  I know there are other people who experienced the same lack of support in their early years and never resorted to violence.  Why?  Perhaps if we can answer these questions we’ll not only reduce prison population but addiction as well.  What is your opinion? 

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Leo

By Kate at 5:00 am on September 19, 2007 | No comments

orange-tabby-cat.jpgAll my life I wanted an orange tabby cat.  Shortly after I purchased my home, one appeared in the yard on a regular basis.  The cat was incredible friendly and had a very large head so I named him Leo.

Shortly after I began feeding him, he disappeared.  4 days later he showed up on a Sunday morning, limping and with eyes glazed over.  I rushed him the emergency clinic.  It wound up Leo had been shot.  The person had been aiming for his heart and shattered his sholder. 

At first I was told Leo might not make it.  Then I was told if he lived they’d have to amputate his leg.  I listened to my own intuition and asked what they could do without taking his leg.  Later in the week I took home a very sick cat.  He had two shunts to drain his injuries, and his front leg (the one that the Veterarnarian thought should be amputated) was placed in a sling.  10 days later, to everyone’s suprise and delight Leo started walking.  Even though his sholder had been shattered and basically did not exist, Leo walked for the rest of his life.

So, next time someone tells you what you can or can not do, or how and if a person may or may not heal, I hope you’ll remember Leo.  The cat that walked without a shoulder.

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Jesus and the Animals

By Kate at 5:00 am on June 15, 2007 | No comments

CrossAnyone who studies the Bible knows that Jesus Christ was a champion for the underdog. He hung out with the lowly which in biblical times included tax collectors, sinners, and women. However, historians and most Christians typically overlook the fact that Jesus was also was a champion for animals. By examining scripture we can see that although the ministry of Christ was targeted at humanity, he interacted compassionately with animals though out his lifetime and he may have been somewhat of a vegetarian.

Beginning in Genesis, human beings are commanded by God to be stewards of the animals. Many people look at Chapter one in the book of Genesis and think this means we are entitled to own and use animals, but in the true meaning of the word, stewardship requires us to be guardians for animals. Prior to the birth of Christ, animal use and abuse was rampant and horrific. Many chapters of the Old Testament depict the large number of animals sacrificed (killed) as “sin offerings”. Beginning with the birth of Christ we see a new relationship with the animal kingdom. “He was born in a stable of lowly birth.” There are many places such as a tavern, a field or a roadside that would have portrayed a lowly birth. Instead Jesus enters the world in physical form amongst the animal kingdom.

sheepThroughout the New Testament, the only animal Jesus seems to eat is fish. We know he attended celebrations and Passover gatherings and most likely there were traditional foods such as lamb, but nothing is recorded of the food he ate at these events. Even when Jesus ate fish or bread, he showed his respect for all life by thanking God and treating food as sacred. According to the Gospel of Mark chapter one, John the Baptist who prepared the way for the birth of Christ and later baptized Jesus, ate only honey and wild locust (insects). This hints at the idea that in some people should refrain from eating meat or that maintaining a vegetarian lifestyle or semi-vegetarian lifestyle is good for us.

In the gospel of Mark, chapter eleven Jesus becomes enraged when he sees caged animals for sale at the temple. “He overturned the tables of the money changers and the seats of those who were selling doves….My house shall be called a house of prayers …but you have made it a den of thieves”. Jesus is furious because the temple is being used as a market place. I understand the focus of this chapter is about keeping the temple as a holy place of prayer, but I often wonder if his rage came from seeing the misuse of the animals as well. His use of the word “thief” is something to ponder. From a humanist perspective, these were business people selling commodities in an inappropriate place, but they were not thieves. However, from an animal rights perspective the traders in the temple were thieves. The people engaged in the buying and selling of animals in the temple were stealing the life of the animals by selling them to be used as sacrifice for “sin offerings”.

The gospel of Luke is extremely significant when examining Christ’s treatment of humans and animals. In chapter four Jesus casts demons out of a man and the man is cured. However, later in chapter eight Jesus casts “legions of demons” out of a man. The demons beg to enter the nearby heard of pigs (swine). We know Jesus could have just removed the demons as he had done previously. Instead Jesus agrees and the pigs become “processed”. They immediately run down a cliff and drowned themselves in the sea below. Initially, this seems to be a cruel act as far as animal rights goes. Why would Jesus allow innocent animals to experience demonic possession? However, on a larger scale Jesus is using this experience to illuminate critical facts about the animal kingdom–fact that were overlooked then and are still overlooked by most Christians today. First, if the pigs had no soul, they could not be possessed. So, the first lesson is that animals have souls. Secondly, the nature of the pigs in this act portrays the deep gift and sacrifice the animal kingdom makes on behalf of humanity. Animals are true companions and burden bearers for humans. Then we realize that throughout the New Testament Jesus frees humans from demonic possession, but this is the only instant where an animal experiences demonic possession and the animal’s immediate response is to commit suicide. This chapter depicts the incredible connection and wisdom that the pigs had with the divine. The entire herd of pigs realizes it is better to be “dead” and with their creator then suffering demonic possession here on earth. Do the pigs understand that as they end their life their spirits will join with God? If so, then this example from the Gospel of Luke indicates the pigs are smarter and more spiritually enlightened than the man who was formerly possessed.

Anyone who studies the life of Christ realizes his ministry was to humanity and our first priority as a Christian is to take care of each other-human to human. We also know that Jesus freed us from strict rules when it comes to diet. However, it’s clear that animals are sacred to the Creator. The Holy Spirit is portrayed as a dove, and Jesus is called the Lion of Judea. To follow in Christ’s footsteps means that we must form a right relationship with the animal kingdom. We must be guardians and adopt beliefs similar to Native American’s–all life is sacred. We live in a time where horrific atrocities are being inflicted on animals; factory farming, senseless animal experimentation, and rising abuse and neglect of domestic animals. But there is hope. If the life of Christ can radically change the way we treat ourselves and each other, it can also change the way we interact with the animal kingdom.

Next Friday I’ll be telling you about a helpful pet product.

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Welcome!

By Kate at 8:25 am on June 7, 2007 | No comments

Pet Care Resource Center of America is a one stop resource center for anyone who loves animals. Our goal is to provide informative pet care tips and provide animal welfare information.  We also review products that may be helpful to pets and the people who love them. When you buy from our website, you are feeding a movement. Pet Garvey, Founder

Sincerely,

Kate Garvey

Founder and Director

Pet Care Resource Center of America

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