Animal Kind. Emma Lock. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Emma Lock
Издательство: Ingram
Серия:
Жанр произведения: Учебная литература
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781642501636
Скачать книгу
ection>

      Animal Kind

      Animal Kind

      Lessons on Love, Fear and Friendship from the Animals in Our Lives

      By Emma Lock

      Coral Gables

      Copyright © 2020 by Emma Lock.

      Published by Mango Publishing Group, a division of Mango Media Inc.

      Cover Design: Elina Diaz

      Cover Photo/illustration: Christin Lola/Shutterstock

      Layout & Design: Elina Diaz

      Mango is an active supporter of authors’ rights to free speech and artistic expression in their books. The purpose of copyright is to encourage authors to produce exceptional works that enrich our culture and our open society.

      Uploading or distributing photos, scans or any content from this book without prior permission is theft of the author’s intellectual property. Please honor the author’s work as you would your own. Thank you in advance for respecting our author’s rights.

      For permission requests, please contact the publisher at:

      Mango Publishing Group

      2850 S Douglas Road, 2nd Floor

      Coral Gables, FL 33134 USA

      [email protected]

      For special orders, quantity sales, course adoptions and corporate sales, please email the publisher at [email protected]. For trade and wholesale sales, please contact Ingram Publisher Services at [email protected] or +1.800.509.4887.

      Animal Kind: Lessons on Love, Fear and Friendship from the Animals in Our Lives

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication number: 2019948623

      ISBN: (print) 978-1-64250-162-9, (ebook) 978-1-64250-163-6

      BISAC category code PETS / Essays & Narratives

      Printed in the United States of America

      For those who keep me safe,

      but leave me wild.

      Table of Contents

      Introduction

       Zak

       Buddy

       Bubbles

       Bear

       Magic

      Acknowledgements

      About the Author

      I’m fairly confident that most fledgling authors don’t normally type “How to write a book introduction” into their Google search bar. I’m also mostly convinced that other writers’ search histories don’t include terms like “What if my book doesn’t sell?,” “Dealing with imposter syndrome” and “Should I just give up on my life, bury myself in the cold soil, and become a carrot?”

      The truth is that as much as I have yearned to write this book and have been utterly and completely obsessed with this project for months, this book almost didn’t happen.

      It’s exciting to enter into a project where you know that you will be baring your soul (with all its sparkles and shadows) on paper or in an audiobook for the first time, but there’s also something unexpectedly jarring about it too. It’s a surreal feeling to know that the words you write, the lessons you learn, and the secrets you share may be enjoyed, critiqued, or survive for many decades. That is, unless this book becomes the disgrace of all literature and a secret, elite band of authors issue an order to have all copies of this book burned.

      I think I’ve finally made peace with the fact that the circumstances under which I finished writing Animal Kind have been less than ideal. Indeed, my imposter syndrome and self-doubt have paled into insignificance when I think back over the past three months and wonder how on earth I managed to survive what can only be described as an unexpectedly prolonged nightmare.

      In my personal story “Bear,” which you will read a little further into the book, you will glimpse a world which I have kept hidden and ferociously protected for several years. There is a part of me, though it is much less dominant now, which didn’t want to share this part of my story, worried that I might be viewed as damaged goods or somehow a failure.

      The truth is that everyone has their struggles. Nobody could (or should) journey through life without picking up a few bumps and bruises here and there.

      In a way, we’re a bit like bananas. We start off a little green and rather sweet, but rapidly become less firm (well, hello there, thirties!) and we begin to accumulate bruises and blemishes which make us unique. If you take away anything from this book, it’s that we are all bananas.

      When I first put pen to paper (or rather fingers to phone) I was cruising at about 33,000 feet on a flight to Omaha, Nebraska, eager to finally collect my long awaited Eurasier puppy, Kiba. If you’re unfamiliar with the Eurasier as a breed, they resemble a colourful Samoyed and can be found in stunning wolf-grey colours, reds, agoutis, and all black. Kiba is almost completely a solid black colour, with a little secret patch of red armpit hair. He might bless you with a glimpse of these magical hairs if you give him a belly rub. They’ve simply been developed as a companion breed, even-tempered and fabulous-looking.

      I was inspired to begin writing Animal Kind at this time because a few seats ahead of me on the aircraft was a man and his service dog—a beautiful border collie.

      Knowing that I had been given the green light to begin writing my book about the ways in which animals inspire positive change in our lives, and knowing now that Kiba had been selected from his litter to become my ESA, I felt that the timing was right.

      If you’re unfamiliar with the term “ESA” it stands for “Emotional Support Animal.” In North America, Emotional Support Animals, Therapy Animals, and Service Animals provide invaluable services.

      Therapy Animals have a calm, sweet demeanour and bring joy to many people by visiting them in hospitals, care homes, and special needs schools. They are also sometimes present in police interview rooms to comfort young witnesses and victims of crime.

      Service Animals are highly trained and highly skilled animals who perform duties and tasks for their disabled owners. Seeing-eye dogs are probably the most widely recognised Service Animals, but other types of service animal can include “medical alert” dogs trained specially to detect seizures or remind their humans to take their medications. Other Service Animals perform tasks which aid their owners, such as opening and closing doors, learning to dial 911 in an emergency, or grounding their owner during a PTSD attack.

      Service Animals are most typically dogs but can be miniature horses as well. It is current US law that Service Animals have public access, meaning that they are generally permitted to accompany their owners anywhere a human is permitted to be, such as on aircrafts, at the movie theatre, in restaurants, and in shopping malls. Yes, this