May God walk with you today.
arlene

--- On Thu, 1/8/09, SharonK <[email protected]> wrote:

From: SharonK <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [Chihuahuas] service animals
To: "Chihuahuas" <[email protected]>
Date: Thursday, January 8, 2009, 9:42 PM










    
            




I need to make several points.  First, I 
have been disabled since 1978.  My disability is not physical.  Mine 
is the result of growing up in a nightmare of a home - a place that thought 
nothing of locking me inside a home-built coffin, a mother who set me up time 
and time again to be sexually abused, a father who blinded my sister by 
punching 
her, a brutally sadistic brother who (never mind - I'm not getting into that 
here).  So my disability is mental/emotional.  This 
disability sometimes makes life VERY difficult.  So difficult 
that I tried to kill myself on June 2, 2007.

 
At this point in my life, I have been homebound 
(agoraphobia) for almost 11 years.  Since I got Katie, I have actually 
taken her for walks!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!! !  This is a MAJOR accomplishment for 
me!!  Admittedly, these have been rather short walks - about a block 
out.  But the fact that I have left my apartment at all is a very good 
sign of just how much Katie is helping me.  As you all know, I need 
surgery.  In an effort to take a step toward getting the surgery and help 
with my other problems, I contacted a therapist.  When she heard how much 
Katie has already helped me, she suggested I make Katie my service dog.  I 
told her I had no idea how to do it.  She sent me a link with this 
statement posted on the home page:
 
"IMPORTANT:  It 
is illegal to label your dog as a Service Dog if you are not disabled.  The 
ADA defines a Service Animal as any guide dog, signal dog, or other animal 
individually trained to provide assistance to an individual with a disability. 
If they meet this definition, animals are considered service animals under the 
ADA regardless of whether they have been licensed or certified by a state or 
local government."
 
Katie meets the 
requirements of the ADA - she assists me in being able to leave my home.  
Therefore, she is my Service Dog even though she has not been licensed or 
certified by any state or local government.  Katie is the only 'thing' that 
has gotten me to leave my apartment in almost 11 years.  With her 
help, I will get to a therapist and I will get to a doctor and then the 
hospital for the surgery.  Eventually I will get to the point where I 
will no longer need Katie by my side just to leave my apartment.  But in 
the meantime, she will be with me every time I go out.  She gives me 
courage and strength.
 
I did not make her 
my Service Dog just so I can take her her everywhere and show her off.  
Without her, I would not be going anywhere!!!! !!!!!!!!!  I made her my 
Service Dog to save my life!!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!! !
 
Sharon & 
Katie
 

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Cim's 
Curio Corner 
To: chihuah...@yahoogro ups.com 
Sent: Thursday, January 08, 2009 8:06 
PM
Subject: Re: [Chihuahuas] service 
animals
We also have to remember that just because a person 
looks normal doesn't mean they are.  Service dogs are now used for people 
with diabetes to alert when there sugar is getting low, people with seizures to 
alert when they might have an episode, there are many other reasons, people 
with 
curtain heart problems, people with asthma both to alert with things are going 
bad before the person realizes because it maybe to late at that 
time.
 

      

    
    
        
         
        
        








        


        
        

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