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Teachings of Dog: When the gates of life are left open...

16/4/2013

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​We’ve had a lot of rain this week here in Scarborough, and the canine members of staff have not been impressed.  When we open the kitchen door to the garden, instead of their usual joyful and enthusiastic egress, they will look up with an expression which quite clearly reads, “In this weather?  I hardly think so…” and will take mortal umbridge when we insist.

Daisy is particularly funny in this respect – she will wait by the door for it to open, decide she does not like the look of the weather, then continue to wait until we open it again for her – just in case it has magically changed in the intervening 20 seconds or so.  When finally convinced that the weather is unsuitable for a Lhasa Apso of her diminutive stature, she will then cross to the other kitchen door, which leads to the car port and, eventually, the front courtyard, and wait there instead – because it’s always possible that while it is dark and raining in the back garden, it might yet be sunny in the courtyard…

On Tuesday evening, it had been particularly wet and, as John was going out again, he had left the courtyard gates open when he arrived home from work – a state of affairs which completely eluded my consciousness when I absent-mindedly let Daisy out of the kitchen side door, at her request…  She often likes to spend quite a long time pottering around the courtyard, so we didn’t immediately miss her – and actually it was only when an extremely wet, muddy, bedraggled and very happy Daisy wandered back in through the open gate that we realised she had been on a further adventure than we knew!
​
Daisy’s Teachings:
  • The best adventures can only be found when you step outside your comfort zone.
  • If you really want something, go for it.  There’s always a risk – but sometimes it’s worth taking to avoid the regret later on.
  • When life offers you an opportunity for happiness, take it – you never know when life will leave the gates open again.
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    Joanna Taylor

    ...and the Canine Members of Staff

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  • Home
  • Forthcoming Courses
    • The Power of Personal History
    • Gestalt & Parts Therapy
    • An Introduction to Human Development
    • Self-Relations Therapy & Generative Trance
    • An Introduction to Solution-Oriented Therapy
    • Avoiding Burnout: Creating Emotional Resilience
    • Feelings & Needs: Introducing Compassionate Communication
    • Mindfulness and Self-Hypnosis for Personal Change
    • Clinical Practice for Hypnotherapists
    • Self-Awareness: Working Safely as a Therapist
    • Introduction to Hypnosis for Coaches and Healthcare Professionals
    • Conversational Hypnosis for Healthcare Professionals
    • The Flexible Therapist
    • INLPTA Certified Diploma in NLP
  • Professional Training Courses
    • Diploma in Clinical Hypnotherapy
    • Certificate in Advanced Neurolinguistic Hypnotherapy
    • Diploma in Clinical Supervision
  • Clinical Supervision
  • The SCNLH Team
  • Resources
    • What is Stress?
    • Stress in the Dental Practice
    • Conversational Hypnosis in the Dental Practice
    • Interview for The Incisal Edge Podcast
    • What is Self-Hypnosis?
    • Techniques for Self-Hypnosis
    • NLP - A Practical Philosophy of Being
    • Goal Setting
  • Hypnotherapy Recordings
  • Contact Us
  • Testimonials
  • SCNLH Blog
  • Student Resources