Anonymous wrote:Look at all the defensive people who bought their dogs from breeders.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Some people make this a big part of their identity.
Who rescued who, amirite?
Anonymous wrote:We live near a dog park so people are often walking by with their dogs. My kids sometimes say something to passersby, like "your dog is adorable!" And 9 times out of 10 the response is a variation of "thanks, he's a rescue."
Do the rescue groups tell people to answer that way? My kids don't really understand what it means (or at least they didn't at first), so I don't think it's a flex to look like saviors or something. Is it like a subtle advertisement for rescuing pets? Or defensive, like not wanting to look like they support bad breeders? Just curious why this is almost always the response.
Anonymous wrote:We live near a dog park so people are often walking by with their dogs. My kids sometimes say something to passersby, like "your dog is adorable!" And 9 times out of 10 the response is a variation of "thanks, he's a rescue."
Do the rescue groups tell people to answer that way? My kids don't really understand what it means (or at least they didn't at first), so I don't think it's a flex to look like saviors or something. Is it like a subtle advertisement for rescuing pets? Or defensive, like not wanting to look like they support bad breeders? Just curious why this is almost always the response.
Similar. Everyone assumes our dog is a pure bred pointer. Our vet was even willing to put money on it. Nope, just a mutt that's a mix of tons of things.Anonymous wrote:I have a beautiful dog. She was a plain little brown lump of fur when I adopted her as a puppy and she grew into a gorgeous dog that everyone comments on.
I say "she's a rescue" to preempt the constant "What kind of dog is she?" questioning that I get because of her looks. She isn't any kind of dog; she's a mutt. Her genetics testing revealed some lab, some gsd, some aussie cattle dog, some "terrier," and mutt history. That takes forever to explain so I just say "she is a rescue" and that usually nips the conversation I don't have time to have in the bud.
Anonymous wrote:Rescue loving people are nuts. My brother would take his rescue dog to a dog park and a random person thanked him for rescuing. He didn’t adopt a child, it’s a dog!