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Irish Wolfhound History
Ní thuigeann an sách an seang.
The well-fed does not understand the lean.
Prefer dogs to humans? You're not alone (or
unbalanced)
By Erica Goode
Sunday, July 6, 2008
NEW YORK: Humans are an overrated species, or so Leona Helmsley
apparently believed.
She briefly considered giving some of her real estate billions to
other humans - indigent people, to be specific - but later changed
her mind, leaving instead up to $8 billion in a charitable trust
solely for the care and welfare of dogs. She favored her Maltese,
Trouble, over her family, providing $12 million for the dog in her
will, a lot more than she left her grandchildren.
Predictably, the news of the extent of Helmsley's charitable bequest
was greeted last week with outrage about misguided priorities and
jokes about a wealthy woman so arrogant, imperious and ill-tempered
that only a canine could abide her.
But Helmsley, though richer and crankier than most, was hardly the
first person to deem the companionship of dogs or other pets more
gratifying than that of people, raising the question of how common
such sentiments are and whether they represent a reasonable choice
in a world of fickle and unpredictable two-legged creatures, or
evidence of some deep-seated psychological disturbance.
The field of psychotherapy has traditionally viewed those whose
closest relationships are with animals as somehow lacking, their
affections pathologically misplaced, their devotion a symptom of
their inability to forge healthy connections with the humans around
them.
But in recent years, researchers have begun to take far more
seriously the bonds between humans and animals and to evaluate those
relationships in a more positive light.
"There are whole segments of the population that prefer being in the
company of dogs than people, and I'm not sure that's such a negative
thing," said Joel Gavriele-Gold, a psychoanalyst in private practice
in Manhattan and the author of "When Pets Come Between Partners."
In a recent study, Lawrence Kurdek, a psychologist at Wright State
University in Ohio, found that college students who had a high level
of attachment to their dogs showed greater attachment to the pets
than to their fathers. Their attachment to their mothers, siblings
and best friends was just about the same as their attachment to
their canine companions, Kurdek found.
The study, reported in the April issue of the Journal of Social and
Personal Relationships, found that the students who were most
strongly attached to their dogs did not show high levels of anxiety
or avoidance - characteristics that some therapists would expect to
see in people with unusually fierce bonds to animals.
The finding, Kurdek wrote, supports the idea that "people strongly
attached to their pet dogs do not turn to pet dogs as substitutes
for failed interactions with humans."
To Gavriele-Gold, the intensity of the relationship between people
and their pets is unsurprising.
"Humans tend to be very disappointing - notice our divorce rate,"
Gavriele-Gold said. "Dogs are not hurtful and humans are. People are
inconsistent and dogs are fairly consistent."
Still, he said, he has seen patients who, betrayed and wounded in
childhood, have turned to a cat or dog for the uncritical support
and love they never received.
"If you grew up in an atmosphere where you were abused, you're not
going to have a high regard for people," he said.
In somecases, a pet can provide an outlet for more unpleasant
traits, like a need to control others, a refusal to compromise or an
inability to grant other people autonomy.
Gavriele-Gold described one patient as "a total control freak" who
became a dog trainer.
"It worked out really well for him," he said. "He was able to marry
a woman who was totally laid-back, and he had no desire to control
her because he was able to do it with the dogs."
Several experts said that from everything they had read about
Helmsley, who died last August, her relationship with her dog may
have fallen into the pathological category.
Healthy or not, Helmsley did not go quite as far in her devotion as
some others. She may have backed her love for Trouble with millions,
but, perhaps because she hailed from a more staid generation, she
never quite declared the bond exclusive.
Others do. A Web site in Britain , www.marryyourpet.com, features
testimonials from pet owners who claim, seriously or not, that their
relationships with their dogs or cats are primary. And Marc Bekoff,
an animal researcher in Colorado, said he was startled recently at a
meeting when a woman kept talking about her "significant other."
It turned out, he wrote in an e-mail message, that she was talking
about a beagle.
Source:
International Herald Tribune