Illustration-Alan -Nordstrom |
Each of these episodes had several plot twists and turns. In both, only one dramatic thread wove
its way through all the extraneous information. The love of a pet by its owner/guardian, and the love the
pet had for them. Pet relationships
and their importance to their caregivers were the central theme in the
characters lives and deaths.
In NCIS, the marine’s death was solved by the quick action
of his bomb-sniffing dog. In TGW, it
was discovered an irate pet owner killed their client. The client had sued the dog owner
because his dog barked. Their client failed to realize what lengths his
neighbor might go to, to keep his pet from harassment or possibly alternative
placement.
As usual, this is Hollywood, ripping stories from the front
pages of real life. Like Law and
Order, which glean all its story lines from the NY Post, NCIS and TGW pulled these
stories from events that have in fact occurred. We all know dogs help solve crimes. Their handlers trust these K-9 partners
with their lives. Similarly,
conflicts between neighbors about a barking dog can seem ridiculous. We laugh and shrug them off. Yet people have been killed or kill over
animal conflicts.
I use these two mainstream programs to illustrate how
widespread our passion for pets and lengths we will go to to care of our pet,
negatively or positively. In the
21st Century we hold our pets in a completely new position in our lives. They are companions and family members.
We need to be aware and respect this change. People need to find a way to address conflicts that may
arise. They can start by being more respectful, and ‘people friendly’ to their pet
friendly/non pet friendly adversaries.
Today, people tend to live a more isolated existence. For the most part, people go to work,
commute alone, have family responsibilities and dynamics that drain them. They escape their drab life via the
Internet. Sometimes, their only ‘human’
contact is ‘non-human’. That cat,
dog, bird, turtle or fish they own may be all that provides them with one on
one loving interaction they are missing in their day.
Take too the person who eschews a pet and yet is bombarded
by the noise, smell or presence of a pet owned by their neighbor. They have chosen to live without an
animal taking up their space. Yet
due to someone else’s choice, their lives are now affected by unwanted noise,
smell or presence.
The fact is 68 percent of family homes include a pet and that
ownership has stimulated an otherwise lackluster economy by $52 billion dollars
in 2012. If you are a pet owner
you are protective of your pet. If
you are a non-pet owner/lover you are often vilified. These two programs understood the new human/pet dynamic. They made it the thread that held all
the story lines in the episode together.
Brilliant. People will always
watch good pet movies. Just look
at the numbers for the recent movie Marley and Me. Even ‘Ole Yeller’ would draw an audience now.
I use these two programs and their use of animal story to
keep viewer engaged to illustrate a point. Pets are more prevalent and important in our lives. As such, conflicts are arising,
involving pets, we have never seen before. Recent press articles indicate people will kill one another
over a pet. A 71-year-old man in
Florida shot his upstairs neighbor for repeatedly allowing their dog to pee off
the terrace onto him and his terrace.
Now he is going to jail and the couples’ 5 children have no parents,
home or the offending dog.
It is difficult to address pet issues as the pet owner or
pet non-owner. Emotions run high
and are worn on your sleeve.
Mediation may be the best way to handle these conflicts. You can have a confidential discussion,
with a third party neutral supporting your wants and needs, and work out a
resolution on your own terms and in a way you want to resolve the problem. And yes, it usually ends short of
murder as in TGW and more along the line of solving the problem in a way there
is a happy ending of all as in NCIS.
Are you tired of putting up with cranky neighbors or being
the cranky neighbor?
Look into having a 3rd party neutral help you
take matters into your own hands, without the gun. Solve for the happiness quotient you all looking for. You and your pets will be glad you did
If I can help in any way please call me or write me
914-273-1085
dhamilton@hamiltonlawandmediation.com
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please do not post your business services on Hamilton Law and Mediation Blog. Thank you.