Can confirm. Usually have a meeting before every year to reaffirm it and the accommodations and make sure everything's still working as desired. Sometimes you can also learn great 'things they don't want you to know' like how I took three years of shop and got the required language credits for graduation.
When I took in my Holy Terror (~4wks, eyes still blue), I kept him in one room with the door locked. Yeah, twice everything for him *and* Larry/Moe/Curly downstairs. I'd eventually let him out on the 2nd floor but made sure he stayed up there (ie, me guarding the stairs) to frolic a bit and get used to the bigger area. Only after a few more weeks did I let him downstairs, but still was ready to consign him back upstairs if I even *thought* I'd accidentally sit on him or step on him. You *NEVER* just let them run around in unfamiliar territory, unless you *want* them to get stuck behind the fridge, or crawl into the gap where water/drain pipes run from the sink into the wall, etc. All it would've taken is for The Kitten to be heading towards the front door of the dorm when someone else would be coming in or going out, then say goodbye forever. The Opie was/is negligent.
story 4: "emotional support animal" *is not trained or well behaved at all and would gladly bite and attack the person it's supposed to be an aid for* Bro who the fuck do you think you're fooling. You can't just claim that an 8 month old chaotic untrained kitten is a real legitimate support animal. Also if you're bringing your pet cat to school, then actually train them so they don't bolt when given the first opportunity, that whole situation is on OP. That plus the constant mention of the cat's "cutesy" and "quirky" name makes me 100% know OP is the in the wrong and they're trying to make themselves seem like the cool and funny main character who thinks a laugh track happens every time they cause a problem. They sound insufferable. God, especially since they just let the cat go without even saying anything. The person saw a cat despising the situation and position they were in and OP framed is as "this dumbass IDIOT wanted me to stop" and wanted to be seen as the funny and quirky hero and risk their cat's safety just for a moment they can smirk and quirk up their eyebrow.
Your 'emotional support animal' is a pet. That is all. Is that not why most of us get dogs and cats? We don't usually get them just for the burden they put on our time and budget. It's for emotional purposes. So, grow up a little bit, and stop giving them a new hip name so you can try to take them into Wal-Mart with you. We all know the chihuahua you're carrying around isn't doing much, and if you can't be away from your dog for even an hour to shop, you need to seek out real therapy. And also, stay home. I shouldn't have to watch out for dog poop while I'm shopping for food, in a place where those two things should never be anywhere near each other. FYI: A service dog IS NOT the same as an ESA. They are properly trained to do a specific job.
That mother needs to lose her license forever. She’s not competent enough to comprehend how to drive and pay attention.
Fun fact: for accommodation, you actually do have to disclose your diagnosis to the school
Can confirm. Usually have a meeting before every year to reaffirm it and the accommodations and make sure everything's still working as desired. Sometimes you can also learn great 'things they don't want you to know' like how I took three years of shop and got the required language credits for graduation.
When I took in my Holy Terror (~4wks, eyes still blue), I kept him in one room with the door locked. Yeah, twice everything for him *and* Larry/Moe/Curly downstairs. I'd eventually let him out on the 2nd floor but made sure he stayed up there (ie, me guarding the stairs) to frolic a bit and get used to the bigger area. Only after a few more weeks did I let him downstairs, but still was ready to consign him back upstairs if I even *thought* I'd accidentally sit on him or step on him. You *NEVER* just let them run around in unfamiliar territory, unless you *want* them to get stuck behind the fridge, or crawl into the gap where water/drain pipes run from the sink into the wall, etc.
All it would've taken is for The Kitten to be heading towards the front door of the dorm when someone else would be coming in or going out, then say goodbye forever. The Opie was/is negligent.
story 4: "emotional support animal" *is not trained or well behaved at all and would gladly bite and attack the person it's supposed to be an aid for* Bro who the fuck do you think you're fooling.
You can't just claim that an 8 month old chaotic untrained kitten is a real legitimate support animal. Also if you're bringing your pet cat to school, then actually train them so they don't bolt when given the first opportunity, that whole situation is on OP. That plus the constant mention of the cat's "cutesy" and "quirky" name makes me 100% know OP is the in the wrong and they're trying to make themselves seem like the cool and funny main character who thinks a laugh track happens every time they cause a problem. They sound insufferable. God, especially since they just let the cat go without even saying anything. The person saw a cat despising the situation and position they were in and OP framed is as "this dumbass IDIOT wanted me to stop" and wanted to be seen as the funny and quirky hero and risk their cat's safety just for a moment they can smirk and quirk up their eyebrow.
Good evening 🙂
morning
Your 'emotional support animal' is a pet. That is all. Is that not why most of us get dogs and cats? We don't usually get them just for the burden they put on our time and budget. It's for emotional purposes. So, grow up a little bit, and stop giving them a new hip name so you can try to take them into Wal-Mart with you. We all know the chihuahua you're carrying around isn't doing much, and if you can't be away from your dog for even an hour to shop, you need to seek out real therapy. And also, stay home. I shouldn't have to watch out for dog poop while I'm shopping for food, in a place where those two things should never be anywhere near each other. FYI: A service dog IS NOT the same as an ESA. They are properly trained to do a specific job.