Category Archives for "Questions"

2 What to do when you and your best friend are attracted to the same person

Football asks: I really like this person and my best mate likes them too. What should I do – ask them out or leave it?

Hi Football –

Oh man does this question go back centuries!  What a horrible situation to be in!  But of course, it makes sense – why wouldn’t you and your best mate be drawn to the same sorts?

I can’t give you a definite answer on what to do, but a few ideas strike me.  If one of these sounds good to you, you might want to try it:

 

1)    Go out to dinner with that best mate of yours, and talk about it.   Is one of you more interested in that person than the other is?  Is one of you also interested in Continue reading

When should people marry?

jillu asks: When will I get married?

Hi jillu –

 

Well of course I’m just a dog, not a psychic, so I can’t give you any great knowledge about what day, month, or year you’ll get married.

But I can talk about when you should get married, and when you shouldn’t.

We hear every day about fights, separations, and divorces, that come from couples marrying when they weren’t quite ready.  So often young people are in a huge rush to get married, and my advice is to Hold Continue reading

How to deal with being taken out by an older sibling

princess23 asks: My older sister is a year older than me, but she hangs out with much older guys and she usually takes me along. I don’t feel comfortable with these people but sometimes I have no choice, and the worst part is that I feel left out. What should I do to not feel like this?

Hi princess23 –

 

I understand your frustration, but it’s kind of funny in a way, because so many younger siblings get so mad when their older brother or sister refuses to take them with them!  Normally, the younger ones get left at home, bored and lonely and rejected, just like… um… just like… US DOGS!!!!

However, you bring up an excellent point, that you can feel just as bored and lonely and rejected with your sister as you would at Continue reading

What makes children bad?

patjo asks: Do you think that children are bad because of themselves or their parents?

Hi Patjo –

 

Well, I don’t know if this is the answer you want, but my answer to your question is…  No!  Absolutely Not!

 

I know what you’re asking, but what I’m saying is that I don’t think children are bad!  I think children are absolutely fantastic.  I think children are magical miracles – funny and brilliant and sweet and fiery and… oh they just smell Continue reading

Is the love of a teenager easily gone?

Jann asks: Hi. Is the love of a teenager easily gone?

Hi Jann –

 

What an amazing question!  I think it’s profound, actually.  The bad news is that I can’t offer you a simple answer!

 

The teenage years are a period of turbulent changes and passions.  Between the chemical changes occurring in the body and mind, and the giant changes going on in a teen’s life, the entire world is in flux.  I feel like you could equally ask “Is love during wartime easily gone” or “Is love easily gone during an earthquake!”

 

So you really have two opposing forces in effect here.  First, the incredible rate of change can mean that what a teenager feels one day may be totally different a week Continue reading

3 Is there something wrong with not having been kissed?

princess23 asks: I’m 15 years old and never been kissed. Is there something wrong with me? I’m the only girl in my class who hasn’t kissed a guy and it’s kinda embarrassing. HELP ME!!

Oh Princess23!

 

Thanks for your question about not having been kissed yet.

 

You see, this is why I find humans so silly!  By the time I was a few days old, I’d been kissed, slobbered on, and bitten by so many other puppies I couldn’t begin to count them!  And that doesn’t mention how many I’D kissed, slobbered on, and bitten!  Now here you are, a 15-year-old princess, and haven’t been kissed at all?!  It sounds like a fairy tale!

 

 

And of course, in truth, it is!  All people’s love lives are fairy Continue reading

1 When is it okay to kiss your boyfriend?

Tizolina asks: Hi, I am 14 years old and I kissed my boyfriend. Is that bad?

Hi Tizolina –

 

Wow, I kissed my first boyfriend when I was probably about four days old!  And I’ve been kissing boyfriends, girlfriends, my mom, strangers, teachers, scary dogs, and most of all, my best friend Handsome, ever since.  I can’t imagine going through a day without lots and lots of kissing!  What would life be without that?!

 

But of course, doggy kisses are treated very differently in our world than the kisses of a 14-year-old to a boyfriend.  Some people don’t like being kissed by dogs because they find us dirty or sloppy (total idiots if you ask me!), but our kisses are never controversial in the way yours can be.

 

This is because, when it comes to teenage romance, there are so many different values that different people Continue reading

How to fit in homework and play

Honey asks: I’m a nine-year-old girl. How can I both do my homework and play, after I get home? I don’t have time!

Hi Honey –

 

Oh I hate this!  I certainly understand why schools assign kids homework – it gives the students a chance to practice what they’ve learned, and builds habits that will help you a lot later in your life – but I’m a huge fan of play!  I play all the time, and I think kids learn as much from playing as they ever can learn from homework.  So while I want you to do the work you have to, and stay out of trouble (!!), I sure want you to have time to play as well.

 

What it sounds like you’re really dealing with is what adults call Time Management.  That’s a fancy term for planning out your day, to make sure you get what you care most about done.

 

So let’s try a pretend day, for an example.  Let’s say you get home at 4:00 in the Continue reading

How can a parent find out what’s bothering their child?

SDK asks: Hello, I have 11-year-old daughter and a 9-year-old son. Nowadays I feel my son’s behaviour is very abnormal. He has also become a little bit weak in his studies. He has a habit of reading the newspaper, but he always reads the accident news only! He behaves very rudely to his grandmother also and also become much harsher in his conversation. Some times he speaks of leaving the house and going away. Please, what would you suggest?

Hi SDK –

 

This is one of those cases where I feel like I’m getting about a hundredth of the information I’d need, to know what to suggest.  You know, those nights when there’s a sound of a rustle in a tree outside, and by the time you’ve run out through the dog-door, you can’t see or hear anything, but there’s a hint of a scent that someone was there, but you don’t know where to search?  (Well, maybe you haven’t had that exact experience.  But hopefully you get what I’m saying!)

 

Clearly there’s something going on with your son.  I wouldn’t worry about the newspaper bit though – it’s actually great that a kid his age is reading the paper at all, and of course stories about accidents are going to be a lot more interesting to a 9-year-old than debates about the Greek economy or settlements in Continue reading

How to handle sibling rivalry in your children

Samiya asks: I am a working lady. I have two kids – an eight-year-old girl and a one-and-a-half-year-old boy. Now I am facing some problems with my daughter. She is telling me lies about small things, asking me if I’m angry with her, telling me I don’t love her… I am always behaving very cool and trying to avoid all this, but some times, I am getting extremely getting irritated. Please help me, how should I behave with my daughter?!

Hi Samiya –

I could be wrong, but I’m going to take a chance here and make a guess that your daughter is showing pure sibling rivalry – though she may not know it herself!

You see, when you had your son, you saw it as making an addition to your family.  But for her, it was like you had just taken half of everything that mattered to her – her home, her toys, and most importantly her mother – and cut her portion of it in half!  Suddenly she had to share everything.  In fact, just because babies take a lot of work, she might have suddenly had to live with less than half of the mommy she depended on!

This doesn’t mean you have done anything wrong; sibling issues (as I’ve talked about on here a lot) go back to the beginning of time, and even cross into other species (believe me, I bit my brothers and sisters a lot to get more of my mom’s attention!).

But now, she’s doing three things that you need to deal with.  She’s lying (which is a test of your attention and trust), she’s asking if you’re angry (expressing a need for assurance), and telling you that you don’t love her (expressing anger and begging you to prove her wrong).  All of these are very normal behaviors for a child in her situation.

Assuming I’m right about her, here’s what I’d like you to do:  First, set very clear boundaries about the lying, by making it clear to her that there are definite consequences for even little lies.  For example, if she lies to you, she doesn’t get any TV for a day.  (Note – the consequences don’t have to be huge; just enough to give her some structure)

Second, when she asks if you’re angry, tell her that you’ll answer her but you’d like her to ask a different question:  have her ask how you’re feeling about her at that time.  Then you can tell her that you’re happy with her, angry with her, madly in love with her, disappointed in her, annoyed with her, amused by her… whatever you’re feeling.  This will actually give her more of what she needs – to know that she matters to you – and expand her own emotional vocabulary, while not being so annoying to you!

And third, when she says that you don’t love her, just look her right in the eye, smile, and tell her “You can’t even imagine how much I love you.  I love you more than the whole wide world!”  Or something like that.

Now if you do that, some day she’s going to hit you with the real question she has, which is “But do you love me as much as you love my brother?”  And when she does, just explain to her that your heart is so big, and so full of love, that you can love both of them that big huge amount.  That you’d do anything and give anything for either of them, and that it’s impossible for you to love one more than the other because there’s no limit to the love you have for each.

Now that’s a lot!  It’s a lot for you to remember to do, but it’s also a lot to ask her to understand.  But it’s the truth, isn’t it!

So Samiya, that’s why I’m so specifically advising you of what to do with your daughter.  Because the sooner she begins to really understand how huge and amazing love is, the better!

 

Good Luck!  Let me know how it goes!

Shirelle