Tuesday 19 September 2017

Overhumanisation

It has never been this easy to boost the cuteness factor by overloading the world with pictures and videos of furry animals. Dogs have become entertainers. There are tons of material on your smartphone to scroll through while you are sipping your morning coffee. Does this new role of dogs in human society do either our beloved pets or us as owners any favours? Can we say they also become happy by making us happy?



Cuteness Overload
Dogs have been the centre of attention for quite a while. Everyone who works in the marketing industry knows pretty well that any commercial advertisement will perform much better with a child and a dog in it. Somehow we react more emotionally.
But the everyday dog has been presented many ways and thousands of times, probably we have got bored with that now. Especially now when we receive more information through social media channels and applications than we could ever even take in. We have seen it all, new ideas are needed to satisfy our hunger for emotional satisfaction.

It is absolutely commonplace now for pets to  have their own profiles that allow anyone to take a look at their everyday doggy lives. You would generally presume they do some sort of everyday, real doggy stuff connected to playing, fetching, doing something with bones like dogs usually do.
However you will more often find pictures of dogs represented as perfectly fitting into human world but not as dogs. They are posing and behaving exactly like humans.
One video presents two dogs with coloured fur on their legs, joyfully sitting and playing in a swing. The majority react and state these dogs have a happy and playful life. Some commenters even claim they can see a smile on their muzzles based on the curve of the faces.

Another family dog has numerous followers on Instagram and to add to the cuteness level, it is posing most of the time with the toddler of the family or holding a teddy bear in its paws just like a human child does. Both the family dog and the little toddler are dressed up the same way in matching clothes. To additionally emphasise how much he fits in the human environment, most of the time this four-legged canine celebrity of the internet is standing on his back legs.
Another cutie luckily has put its dark past at the shelter behind it and started a brand new life in the light, regularly visiting mum’s favourite restaurant and happily poses with pancakes, fries, burgers and even with a cappuccino. If you read articles about it you get to know that he certainly (and luckily) does not eat all of these. These are just accessories to demonstrate what a happy life it has at last.
These are just three simple but different examples of dogs promoting their happy life to the public of the modern era.

Happy Chappies
Question time: Why am I complaining about dogs having fun?
Who could scroll past two dogs sitting in a swing spending their time playing together with their colourful furry legs? Who would not feel happy to see a once-starving dog saved from the hunger of life in a shelter sitting at a table overloaded with tasty burgers? Who has any problems or negative feelings about a family portrait of a dog totally fitting into a family, becoming BFF with the youngest member of its new home, especially when both of them are adorably dressed the same?
It is obvious that these dogs make us smile, laugh and have warm, positive feelings. But why is it even necessary to write (or even read about) an article about social media dog ‘celebrities’ making people laugh, smile or feel overwhelmed by positive emotions?
However, the really big question is: what makes a dog happy?

Can a dog sit comfortably in a swing, if you consider its anatomy, without it being unhealthy for its spine? We are talking about an animal which has four legs and uses all of them for totally different type of movements. Does this sort of play invented for human kids make any amusement for a dog instead of playing fetch, for instance?
Do care and engagement really mean that a dog behaves the same way as the youngest member of the human pack? Will a dog feel loved and appreciated by being dressed up the same as the other members of the family? Should (or can) a dog behave like a human, hugging a teddy bear; can it enjoy and understand what it means to have a tea party? Is a dog really like that?
Does it give any extra value to a dog’s life when it is pictured with many foods it could never, and should never, eat? Does it make a dog happy to be taken to a restaurant and watch everyone having a nice lunch?

Each of us has different ideas what happiness is. We know some children like to run, some like to play swings, others sit in front of the TV or read books.
But can we understand at all that what is impressive for the human, is completely irrelevant, meaningless, useless or at some cases even harmful for a dog?


Different Species, Different Joy
Dogs are different. They have different habits and different needs to any of us humans – both physically and mentally. As dogs integrate more and more into our society, it seems that we, the humans who are privileged to take care for this species, seems to forget more and more about these differences.

It is natural that we humans generally form our own ideas about others from our own perspective. Even when we interact with our fellow species we try to estimate what they think, what their intentions are and when we care about someone, we repeatedly try to figure out how can we make them happy. But we do all these from our own aspect and mostly based on our terms, ideas and experiences.
But when it comes to animals we should take much more care and effort to separate our knowledge of human behaviour from the real needs of our pets.

It is unquestionably a new trend that we partly substitute our human relationships and interactions with pets. Dogs are especially capable of fitting in. They are able to communicate, adapt to a household, fulfil different sort of roles, and ideally can blend into our everyday life regardless our own habits and everyday routines. This is normal. But in most cases, as soon as they take their place we start to force humanlike habits and expectations on them.

When we try to figure out what makes our dog cheerful, we should take into consideration we are talking about an absolutely different species.
If we like play on swings or consider that most children like swings, we presume that dogs operate in the same way. But this is not the sort of activity that makes a dog feel challenged in a doggy way.
As well as misunderstanding and misinterpreting our dogs’ habits, needs and personality characteristics, we should be even more careful when attempting to guess at their feelings and when we are trying to decode their means of communication. For instance, a smiling curve on the face of a dog does not mean that it is happy all the time since it is always smiling. It is just the natural shape of their face.
A tea party with a funny hat with cake and tea for a dog makes a great a picture (and we can gain huge amount of social attention and approval), but it definitely has no positive effect on the life of the dog. Such a situation itself is, from the dog’s point of view, absolutely incomprehensible.


Considering the Canine Inside
You could simply ask: what is wrong with this if it is fun? Why be grumpy about being entertained when you could be watching all these fluffy pets having a good time? Even if the happiness only exists from the point of view and expectations of the human onlooker, there is no harm caused at all.
A rescued dog has a better life because its environment and the quality of stimuli it experiences have radically changed; the resources it can access (food, healthcare, general care, physical activities, etc) have greatly broadened and so the likeliness that it can finally have a healthier and happier life increases. But this positive change has nothing to do with sitting in front of foods it cannot touch. This situation does not make any dog happier, ever. The smile on our face as we look at a dog posing in this way is totally irrelevant to the welfare of the dog and it has nothing to do with whether it is happy or not.

The problem with the phenomena of overhumanising dogs is that we present a false idea about the nature, characteristics and needs of dogs. Most animal welfare issues crop up from insufficient knowledge and misunderstandings about our pets’ needs, what makes them happy and healthy, so many households don’t have the ability to keep a dog properly, without even getting on to how to handle challenging situations and conflicts with these animals. These false representations of dogs build up and maintain an unreal public idea about dogs and actually trigger animal welfare issues.
We both present and receive a fake picture about dogs, seeing them in a way they are never going to be. And if we stay hooked up to this false picture, we additionally miss what dogs really need instead. We transform them and force them into a behaviour and environment absolutely alien to their nature.

We are bringing dogs into our lives more frequently as a substitute for other human relationships. Meanwhile we are also more and more prone to forget about taking doggy needs and characteristics into consideration.
No matter how much you like your dogs and even in a situation where you treat them like family, and appreciate them more than most of your human relationships, always remember their own characteristics and their unique needs. We should not turn them into humans, forcing our unreasonable expectations on them while abusing their true nature and inner needs.
Dogs are dogs.

Image: Dreamstime

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