Dr Abe V Rotor
“Make
these dogs happy,” I told a group of schoolchildren who were taking
art lessons from me. I gave each of them a copy of a trace drawing of a
pair of dogs. The dogs looked sad, docile and there is something
pathetic about them.
With pastel colors they took the
challenge. In their young mind I saw their pets at home. As I studied
the expressions of their faces and actions they were not only
re-creating their pets physically - they we virtually “caring for their
pets.”
And what do you think they did with these
animals? How kind are these children to them? How good are they as
masters – or friends to their pets?
If you would
like to try this workshop exercise yourself, stop reading this article.
Draw a pair of dogs on a whole bond or Oslo paper and proceed without
reading the criteria below. The instruction is simply, Make your pet
dogs happy.
These are the criteria in grading your
drawing. Use the Likert Scale of 1 to 10, where 1 is poorest, 5 average
and 10 outstanding. Each criterion is equivalent to 10 points, so that
the perfect score is 100 percent.
1. Unchain the dogs
– A young participant made a drawing of a chain being sawed off in
order to free the dogs. Truly there is nothing more important than
freedom. This is also true with animals. Aren’t zoos today moved to
bigger spaces where the habitats of the animals are simulated? In
Safari Africa tourists are taken to see the animals in the wild, and not
vice versa.
2. Build a doghouse
– Keep them from heat and cold. Give them a sense of security and
comfort. Give the doghouse some art and a bit of aesthetic sense. The
house is a status symbol but its functional features are foremost.
3. Provide a shade – A tree beside the doghouse is a magnificent scene:
a
bird’s nest atop, birdlings and parents singing at feeding time, ripe
fruits hang, a kite is stuck up on a branch, a boy climbs to retrieve
it, leaves fall and form a litter on which the dogs lay. These and many
more, which the children drew, revive the childhood to every viewer of
their art works.
4. Give them bone
– If there is anything a dog is associated with, it is a big bone.
Aesop saw it fitting for a fable, a lesson about greed. For the dog
however, it is security and plaything. Be sure you give your pets food,
fresh water and proper nutrition. Just do not overfeed them.
5. Play with them, give a plaything
– I found out that many of my pupils drew themselves beside or playing
with their pets. Others drew cats and mice playing with their dogs.
Playing is universal among animals, tame or in the wild. Others raced
with them on the meadow.
6. Groom them
- Give them bath and comb them. Several drawings showed the dogs in
attire, one in a circus, the others in casual wear, one eating on China
ware. This is not rare because we often think of animal as human
beings. Read “Animal Farm” by George Orwell. Or see the movie,
“Babe.” Aesop’s fables are about animals who think like human beings –
or it could be the other way around as Aesop wanted to drive a point,
quite often a painful lesson. Aesop was silenced because he was
unwittingly hurting people with his fable.
7. Teach them tricks and discipline
– A ball, a stick, an electronic gadget to open or close the doghouse,
are among the things the young participants included in their
drawings. Why there’s a saying, “Old dogs learn no trick.” But the
children saw their pets as young as they are. This means they are
growing up together.
8. Vaccinate your dog
– A participant drew a veterinarian administering an anti-rabies
shot on his young pet. Precaution is always important, rabies is
dangerous.
9. Artistic quality of your drawing
10. No wasteland or vacant space on your drawing paper.
Compute for the total score.
91 to 100 outstanding. You are a superb master. Indeed you a great caretaker of pets.
81 to 90 very good. You know how to take care of your pets properly.
71 to 80 good. It's all right. Give more care and attention to your pets.
60 to 70 average. You got to learn many things about taking care of pets. Find interest in pets.
59 and below. Listen to Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid lessons. Attend a dog training school for pet owners.
Who
are these children mirrored by their drawings? And who will they be
through the keyhole of their imagination? How we regard our pets is what
we are and will become.
“A starving dog at his master’s gate predicts the ruin of the state,” thus William Blake in “Auguries of Innocence” tells us.
I, for one, would gladly meet with confidence and ease the master of a contented and happy dog.
The
art workshop for children in which I used the dog as an exercise to
demonstrate love for animals may be a simple way of changing attitudes
and developing values. But children are known to be very effective in
carrying out the multiplier effect of a lesson such as this one.
“Make
these dogs happy,” could mean a thousand dogs in the future, and a
thousand enlightened children who follow the footsteps of those who
unchained the dog, build a doghouse, gave a bone - and made the world a
kinder one. ~
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