Thursday 24 June 2010

Just for fun...Enjoy!



I hope that you enjoy this as much as I did. Communication between humans and animals. Wonderful!






:)))))))))))

Laugh more and play more.

Note: Photo Baby Finley on a mission May 2010.

4 comments:

Andrew Sutton said...

It is not the communication that is most remarkable here, nor even the quality of the 'canogogy' that must have gone into what one sees, and the human-animal bond on which that is surely founded.

What is remarkable are human understandings and systems that deny the possibility of an even half-decent pedagogy and do what they do instead without a modicum of mutual affection, with according results.

Andrew.

Rony Schenker, OTR, PhD, Tsad Kadima, Israel said...

Apropo communication between humans and animal, last night I reading “The Story of Edgar Sawtelle” by David Wroblewski.
"Mr. Wroblewski puts Edgar on a warm, cozy, paw-boxing basis with the Sawtelle dogs by rendering the boy mute from birth. Although Edgar’s condition is a terrible liability at certain crucial plot junctures, it is more often a blessing. Edgar speaks his own private sign language to people and dogs alike. He has no trouble making himself understood to his loved ones, whether they have two legs or four..." ( from the New York Times Review by Janet Maslin)

And Mr. Wroblewski has a deft, natural way of conveying Edgar’s relationship to language. Edgar speaks as clearly as any of the book’s other human characters do. It’s just that his dialogue, unlike theirs, is presented without quotation marks. Within the Sawtelle household, Edgar is by far the easiest person to understand.

Mandy Elliott said...

Life is incredible when you look in the right places isn't it? :O)

Judit Szathmáry said...

Everything has its inner genius and everybody has an inner genius built within him or her. It is our perception, which prevents us from tapping into this inner genius. As Albert Camus said: "The opposite of a civilized society is a creative one."
Nature has nothing to do with civilisation and its genus is unmistakable.
Communication is a form of energy exchange and it could be observed and could be talked about within the narrowest or the widest of contexts. Communication is life itself as by existing we participate in, and we are in constant communication with an interconnected and interrelated existence. Life only knows integration.
We communicate on many levels and children, animals and nature show us many different ways of doing so. They don’t have the problem, we do!

It is the ‘concrete mind’ within its specific social context, which finds it hard to connect a multitude of requirements. Clarity, discipline, trust and respect are some of the fundamentals to any pedagogy and to communication/exchange in a most constructive and creative way.
Ps. Sorry for not replying earlier I was away in Oxford visiting an old friend.
Judit