I try to refrain from the alarmist statement, really I do. It's bad for the liver and worries the dog, who has plenty enough to worry about as it is.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
People do sometimes ask me some really idiotic questions: 'Is your husband afraid of you putting arsenic in his food?' I replied that I have never written a book about poison, ever.
I'm a great dog fanatic. My own dog died a little while ago and I take it very personally when things die - it's a major offence.
If a dog will not come to you after having looked you in the face, you should go home and examine your conscience.
Worry is the stomach's worst poison.
I just refuse to worry or get upset or be fearful. It doesn't do one particle of good.
Dogs get lost hundreds of times and no one ever notices it or sends an account of it to a scientific magazine.
Investigators have discovered that dogs can laugh, which can't be too big of a surprise.
Hunger and fear are the only realities in dog life: an empty stomach makes a fierce dog.
And if you're not going to have a clear health threat, you don't want to panic people.
I see dog stories as an antidote to the dire news that nothing is ever going to get better.
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