Special limited time offer for you and up to two pets courtesy of Red Bird Photography

If you have been thinking about or wanting professional photography with you and your pets, Tim and Grace from Red Bird Photography have put together a very special, limited time offer that may be purrfect for you and your furry companions!


With over 10 years of study and experience between them, Tim and Grace from Red Bird Photography are experienced and amazing at what they do; they capture the best moments and devotion of you and your pets and showcase them in beautiful print packages of your choice.  Located in the Blue Mountains, only an hour away from Sydney CBD, they provide photography sessions for those located in Sydney and in the Blue Mountains.

Red Bird Photography actively support the RSPCA. When they’re not in a photography session with their customers, they are often found donating their time to the NSW RSPCA taking gorgeous photos of the many shelter animals across the state who are awaiting adoption into furever homes. Tim and Grace will also be present at the 2012 RSPCA Million Paws Walk in Katoomba this Sunday, May 20 showing their support, taking photos throughout the event and displaying some of their wonderful products and services, so make sure you get your tails down there to see them on the day and say hello!

Red Bird Photography
Website: http://www.redbirdphotography.com.au
Phone: 0406 775 271
Email: info@redbirdphotography.com.au

Follow Red Bird Photography on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/redbirdphoto

My $500 goal was yesterday. Today, I am aiming even higher thanks to your continued donations!

It has been an incredible and wild first 24 hours into my fundraising for the RSPCA. Yesterday, when I opened my fundraising page to accept donations, I initially set a goal to raise $500. Those of you who have already donated in sponsor of me have been so amazing with your contributions that I have already currently raised $451 which means I am only $49 away from meeting that initial $500 goal!

But I’m not going to stop there. In response to your support, I have now increased my challenge and set my new goal to raise $1,000! Thank you so much for your donations and support. Keep up the amazing effort, guys – you are AWESOME!

Let’s keep the donations coming in for the RSPCA and this great cause!

If you are a business or corporation who is willing to step up to the challenge and get involved in sponsoring me by donating to this great cause, I would love, love, LOVE to hear from you! Don’t be shy – be bold, passionate and wonderfully delighting – no matter how great or small your contribution is, it would be hugely appreciated!

Sponsor me in support of the RSPCA and donate now:
http://www.millionpawswalkfundraising.com.au/hero_pages/view_posts/hwsmpw

Sponsor me in the RSPCA Million Paws Walk 2012

Sponsor me and Saxon in the RSPCA Million Paws WalkI adopted my Kelpie cross Staghound, Saxon, just over one year ago from the Yagoona RSPCA shelter. He is now a healthy 15-month-old who is full of life, love and is a constant source of laughs and fun in my life. I cannot imagine life without him.

This year on May 20, 2012, I will be walking 4.6km with my dog Saxon to raise funds and show support for the RSPCA and animals in need everywhere. This will be Saxon’s first time participating in the RSPCA Million Paws Walk and we are super excited! I have a passion for animals, responsible pet ownership and animal welfare. When I’m not working at my day job during the week, I am spending my weekend working at the Rouse Hill RSPCA Care Centre.

I have set a goal to raise at least $500 in funds for the RSPCA but I am hoping that, with your help and support, I can totally SMASH that $500 goal! I’d really appreciate it if you could share this as far and wide as you can, donate some money and get as many people as you can to also donate to my fundraising page.

The money raised will be helping the RSPCA care for the thousands of animals received each year – provide them with the medical care, love, food, support and shelter they need and deserve. It will also help every animal great and small find their fur-ever home. It will speak volumes about how we should look to adopt shelter animals before we consider impulse buying from a pet store or puppy mill.

All funds raised go directly to the RSPCA.

If you are willing to sponsor me in the 2012 RSPCA Million Paws Walk, you can make your donation online on my fundraiser page: http://www.millionpawswalkfundraising.com.au/hero_pages/view_posts/hwsmpw

If you are a business or corporation who is willing to sponsor me by donating to this great cause, I would love, love, LOVE to hear from you!

Stop at nothing – Kony 2012.

If you have 30 minutes to spare in your day, please take the time to watch this video that exposes the injustice of LRA Leader Joseph Kony. We have so many freedoms and live in safety that we often take for granted. Freedom and safety that the children of Uganda deserve to have. That they NEED to have.

YOU are their only hope.
STOP AT NOTHING.
KONY 2012.

It needs to be said. Negative people read this.

Dear negative people,

I grow so weary of you and your negativity. You drag me down when I’m up and when I’m down you try to pull me further down.

I want to tell you the following:

  1. I have no more room for negativity in my life. If you are negative, you are no longer welcome.
  2. I refuse to argue with you any longer. It wastes my time, energy and I’m above it.
  3. My love and affection cannot be bought.
  4. Some people only seem to call or come by when they need something. If this is you: stop calling and coming by.  I don’t mind helping but I won’t be used.
  5. Please don’t tell me how negative I am only to turn around and spew nothing but negativity. If I am negative, I must have learned it somewhere. Now I’m trying to un-learn it.
  6. I’m the best person I can be. If you can do better, that’s great, good for you; go do it and let me be.
  7. I’m the best wife I can be. See #6 for the end of this declaration.
  8. Put a smile on your face and laugh more. You’ll be amazed at the things it brings.

Please, take my words to heart. I’m serious. If you are a negative influence on my life, I have enough to deal with on a daily basis, I fight my own negativity and I don’t need yours to add to it.

Negative People

 

28
Sep 2011
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DISCUSSION 1 Comment

Humans: the worst breed

Recently, a young girl was killed by an attack from a pit bull dog that had escaped from its owners yard and ran inside her home. This has sparked a major debate on the viciousness of the pit bull breed. Many are suggesting that simply because the dog is a pit bull, this means they are vicious and will attack. This debate isn’t new and has been talked about, off and on, for quite some time. In fact, American Pit Bulls are illegal to own in Australia – this is how bad our finger pointing has become; that the dog is the problem and not the handler, ever.

Watch: Dr. Ian Dunbar talks about dog attacks.

I am so relieved to find that someone out there, other than me, understands that dogs aren’t “bad” just “because of their breed.” Humans are often the problem whenever behavioral issues in dogs arise and we are always so quickly to lay blame elsewhere instead of stopping and assessing the entire situation and making the changes we really should be making. All dogs have the ability to be aggressive and attack, even the tiny dogs that we so often dismiss because it looks so cute, small and cuddly that we act as though it wouldn’t hurt a fly. It is dog owners who need to learn responsibility as well as appropriate and effective leadership of their dog(s) and it is also the wider community who needs to take a moment to learn about dog psychology and behaviors.

Too often dogs are put down or surrendered to pounds and rescue shelters because we don’t make the effort to provide the leadership, balance and stability the dog requires. We see the dog as “the problem” and take the easy way out. If your child acts out, you don’t begin looking for places to put them up for adoption or have them killed (or, as we say for dogs, “destroyed” – as though it’s an object), which I think begins to touch on part of the problem with many dog owners; they see their dog not as a living creature or companion, but rather as an object that should only be around when it’s convenient for them. They invest only in a one-sided relationship, where they ask the dog to give them all the love and fun they want, when they want it, but provide nothing in return.

At the end of the day, the less misconceptions we have about dogs and their breeds and the more public awareness and appropriate education is provided to everyone, the better man and his best friend will be. This is something Cesar Millan often spends a lot of time educating people and dog owners everywhere about. His pit bulls (particularly ‘Daddy’ and ‘Junior’) are perfect examples of how effective calm-assertive leadership will ALWAYS mean a calm and balanced dog, no matter what breed they are or what tendencies they have displayed in the past.

18
Aug 2011
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DISCUSSION 3 Comments

You’re unique, just like everyone else

I was having a discussion with two of my friends today, one of whom is lesbian and the other being straight. For the record, I am straight and haven’t dabbled in the realm of being lesbian, nor have I ever seriously considered doing so (sorry, fellas). At this point, we included another one of our friends (who also identifies as gay) to weigh in on the discussion we were having about homosexuality. This person felt the need to resort to calling me and my straight friend “homophobic.” I have a problem with this, and I took offence.

I fail to see how I am homophobic. Many of my friends are gay, many of my work colleagues are gay; hell, I even spent a portion of my life living with a gay man. I don’t judge my friends or work colleagues who are gay, I don’t call them freaks or look at them differently. In fact, I don’t treat them any differently to how I would treat anyone else. Why? Because their sexuality preferences are irrelevant to me and I treat them as a person, not as a minority group of special people. I take offence to being called a homophobe because it unfairly places me alongside people who actually are homophobes, who say and do horrible things towards gay people simply because they’re not “one of us.”

Effectively, I have just been placed in with a group of people who do not represent who I am, what I believe in and stand for in the same way that gay people are often unfairly judged and placed in groups that do not accurately depict who they are, what they believe in and what they stand for. It is this mentality and action which I do not agree with and I certainly didn’t expect such a narrow-minded and judgemental comment to come from someone who we considered as a friend. I support and encourage equality, including beyond sexual preference (because, let’s face it, judgement and prejudice exists in other forms outside of simply being gay or straight).

I support gay marriage and for same-sex couples to experience all of the same freedoms and liberties that straight folk are automatically given at birth. I’m not going to enter into debates about whether sexual preferences are a choice or something that happens at birth because I consider both of these points to be entirely irrelevant. The reality is that these people, for whatever reason,  are attracted to and enjoy the pleasures of someone of the same sex and that’s what needs to be accepted, not whatever precedes this outcome in order to change or prevent this outcome from occurring at all. Sexuality knows not about “right” or “wrong;” in fact, it doesn’t even care.

It bothers me that someone who I accept as being exactly who they are would be so disrespectful as to commit the very same act that gay people are often trying very hard to have others not do to them. The mentality of “don’t throw stones at my glass house, but I’ll throw stones at whoever I want” – that idea that simply because they are in a minority group, if anyone talks about that group or tries to have a civil discussion of any kind, it must be because they hate gay people and are trying to be derogatory and intolerant. It disappoints me that this is the attitude my friend chose to take and clearly display toward people who care about them.

It’s the same sort of issue that bothers me about female only gyms; I don’t understand why there are female only gyms in the complete absence of male only gyms. I appreciate and understand the feeling of not wanting to go to a gym with the “ogling eyes” of men and that being around other women can make you feel safer, more inspired and (hopefully) amongst a group of like-minded and non-judgemental people. I really do. I don’t, however, think this should be at the expense of men not being able to be afforded the same right to have a men only gym, for any reason.

There’s a lot of “the past” being held on by people and it’s preventing them from being able to evolve and progress. Women have been (and some still are) treated poorly by men and society but I would like to think that the vast majority of men have evolved from that and have become better, more understanding and tolerating. The idea that we would still consider punishing men of today for things they personally have not done, for things generations before them have done just astounds me;  but the gender equality discussion is beginning to open a whole new can of worms and delve even further into the wider equality issues that are out there. Besides, I think I’ve already said enough for today, but I will say this:

Selective/Conditional equality is not equality or tolerance.
Acting as though you should be ‘special’ or that you are ‘different’ is not equality, either.
Judging others unfairly and asking not to be judged unfairly in return is not tolerance.

You can’t have your cake and eat it too, not matter what GLaDOS might try to tell you.

17
Aug 2011
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DISCUSSION 0 Comments

What has been seen cannot be unseen

So, I saw this photo posted by an old acquaintance of mine (who has been cropped from this photo) and noticed her friend. All I have to say is, “OH GOD, MY EYES!”

Sigh. Since when did I start acquainting with people that seem to befriend people that look like heroin addicts?

 

 

11
Aug 2011
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DISCUSSION 0 Comments
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