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-   -   What to say if your House Mom has a pet... (https://greekchat.com/gcforums/showthread.php?t=114777)

WeSpeakSunshine 07-15-2010 04:23 PM

What to say if your House Mom has a pet...
 
Hello everyone,

I'm new to the forum, so bear with me. Our sorority was just informed that we'd have a new House Mother in the fall. This is great news; however, she comes with a standard poodle. Although our house is thrilled about our new additions, I was just wondering what a good way would be to market the dog during Formal Recruitment.

I know having a dog is a large responsibility, and there is always the risk of allergies/attacks/everything else you could think of, but that's not what I'm here for. We've weighed all the risks, trust me. Now the task is just how to tell PNMs that yes, we have a house dog, and yes, she will live in our house mom's apartment, not the rest of the house.

Is there any way to put this in kosher terms, or anyone who has gone through the same situation? We want to let the PNMs know, but not in a harsh way. And the least we want to do is become known as "the house with the dog."

Thanks so much in advance!

psusue 07-15-2010 04:27 PM

Am I the only one who would think this is a huge advantage during recruitment? I would have SO gone to "the house with the dog" if we a. had houses and b. were allowed to have dogs anywhere in our dorms.

Basically, you can't do anything about it so just try to talk it up, if it comes up, and otherwise just don't stress about it. If it is like you said and the dog will only be in your house mom's apartment then it shouldn't be a huge issue, right?

Drolefille 07-15-2010 04:27 PM

My thoughts:

Include pictures of the house mom and poodle in any display you have.
Keep the dog out of recruitment itself
If a PNM mentions having allergies, know how to assure her what you're doing to manage that.
Don't market the dog. Answer questions about the dog or talk about the picture with the dog in it, but don't "market" it.

WeSpeakSunshine 07-15-2010 04:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Drolefille (Post 1955235)
My thoughts:

If a PNM mentions having allergies, know how to assure her what you're doing to manage that.

Well, poodles are hypoallergenic; we're not too worried about that one. It's just that even though the dog is really amiable, some people might be uneasy with it living in the house, because (being a standard) it's a pretty good-sized dog. We're afraid it might turn people off, just because they think it could be harmful.

I'm kind of biased...I own a standard poodle myself, so I think they're great dogs. But I'm not sure how others would perceive them, and if that could possibly be a detriment.

kddani 07-15-2010 04:44 PM

A lot of people aren't into dogs, especially larger ones (i.e. non-lapdog).

I would've been pretty turned off from a house that had a dog. Not only because I am allergic, but because I'm just not a large dog person.

Drolefille 07-15-2010 04:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by WeSpeakSunshine (Post 1955243)
Well, poodles are hypoallergenic; we're not too worried about that one. It's just that even though the dog is really amiable, some people might be uneasy with it living in the house, because (being a standard) it's a pretty good-sized dog. We're afraid it might turn people off, just because they think it could be harmful.

I'm kind of biased...I own a standard poodle myself, so I think they're great dogs. But I'm not sure how others would perceive them, and if that could possibly be a detriment.

That's why I think you should just have the dog in a picture or two, and if a PNM gets all excited about the dog then great talk about it, and if someone expresses concern then that active can mention how well behaved the dog is.

Recruiting with the dog present or in any way "marketing" the dog is going to bring out the "house with the dog" thing and possibly intimidate PNMs who are nervous about dogs (but who could get used to it any other time but during high stressed rush).

gee_ess 07-15-2010 05:00 PM

Why is the dog even a factor? Why bring it up at all? Will the dog be hanging out in the house? Will the housemom insist that the dog be on the front lawn for game day activities? If not, then it is a moot point.

Frankly, I don't think a house mom and her activities are recruitment conversation fodder, other than "We have a great house mom. She is so caring and loving, etc"

I say, do not even bring it up. The dog is not part of XYZ sorority, and therefore, has no bearing on info a girl needs to know about pledging there.

carnation 07-15-2010 05:06 PM

gee_ess, you're right on the money. I've known of housemoms with pets but no one ever discussed the housemom in recruitment.

ellebud 07-15-2010 05:34 PM

Regarding allergies and dogs: Poodles are purchased for families who have allergy problems. They are "safe" in that area. They are usually well behaved. We do not have poodles. My inlaws did. And they were very nice and calm dogs.

Drolefille 07-15-2010 05:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ellebud (Post 1955273)
Regarding allergies and dogs: Poodles are purchased for families who have allergy problems. They are "safe" in that area. They are usually well behaved. We do not have poodles. My inlaws did. And they were very nice and calm dogs.

It is possible to still have an allergic reaction to poodles and other "hypoallergenic" dogs. It's just less likely.

AlphaFrog 07-15-2010 05:40 PM

You could always hid him in the kitchen with the rest of the house undesirables.

/rimshot

Senusret I 07-15-2010 05:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AlphaFrog (Post 1955280)
You could always hid him in the kitchen with the rest of the house undesirables.

/rimshot


http://i880.photobucket.com/albums/a...98/33bkglu.gif

dreamseeker 07-15-2010 05:48 PM

^^ poor chris.

angels&angles 07-16-2010 08:45 AM

Our housemom had a cat. It mostly stayed in her quarters except occasionally, when she would bring it up and let us pet it. It was never an issue.

The only way this would be a problem that I see is if the housemom just lets the dog run around the house. Otherwise, I don't think it will matter. Best case scenario, dog becomes a sort of mascot, worst case scenario no one even knows it's there.

ree-Xi 07-16-2010 12:09 PM

One of the Sig Eps on my campus was blind and had an assistance dog (I think he made it into the yearbook photo and quite possibly their composite). That dog was amazing. I am in awe of service dogs. The dog was super cute, and guys treated him so well.

If you were talking to someone and mentioned Sig Ep and someone wasn't sure which fraternity they were, most people said, "you know, the one with the dog."


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