Looking for 3/4" Padded Handle Dog Leash 4 to 6 foot leash?
please consider our Handmade Strong 3/4 inch Padded Handle Dog Leash made of durable nylon.
Dog nylon leash for tracking, training, walking with support material on the handle.
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Waterproof Nylon Pitbull Leash for Training and Walking
Durable Pitbull Leash for Daily Walking
Nylon Pitbull Leash with Soft Padded Handle
size of leash:
3/4 inch on 4 FT (2.0cm on 120.0cm)
3/4 inch on 6 FT (2.0cm on 180.0cm)
General "Woof" Tip: One of the things I would like to pay your attention at:There are many resellers around the Internet which are not direct makers and sometimes don’t even know how and what for products they sell are made.Ask right questions to find out if you deal with main source or if you are going to pay extra money just because product you are about to purchase went through 2-4 extra hands before it reaches you.I like to save extra buck and it won’t harm you either, so check if you are purchasing product from main source.Most of the times if you ask fro a small change in size adjustment, only maker will be able to do it for you. ..to start reading this article from the beginning please click on here....On the other hand, some people might see qualities in this breed that run contrary to its negative image and want to establish "traditional" human dog relationships with their pit bulls. Nevertheless, they "inherit," and presumably have to contend with adverse public perceptions of their pets. Sociologically, this adverse perception can be considered a breed stigma where the animal itself has a "spoiled" or tainted identity and where owners may experience a courtesy stigma as a consequence of their association with, and ownership of, pit bulls. Humans experience stigma when they possess certain physical or mental traits that result in various negative consequences such as social exclusion, anxiety, alienation, loss of self esteem, discrimination, and social disenfranchisement. In the face of social disapproval or even fear, stigmatized individuals seek to manage or respond to these adverse perceptions by relying on interpersonal strategies that minimize, neutralize, or evade their stigma - as, for example, do epileptics and animal researchers. Individuals undertake these steps to manage their stigma as a part of the dramaturgy of everyday life whereby people seek to present a certain image of themselves, especially in terms of the small, unremarkable interactions that comprise a substantial part of routine social behavior. "...individuals deliberately 'give' and inadvertently 'give off' signs that provide others with information about how to respond". Although some information that people communicate is inadvertent, much of it is deliberate and carefully orchestrated. Given the degree to which our social reality hinges on people's unspoken agreement to uphold common expectations about public conduct, the failure to do so results in a sense of uneasiness. In this regard, people not only maintain and promote social interactions through their presentation of self but also seek to repair damaged or disrupted relationships. Dramaturgical sociologists have noted that impression management can involve a "team" of actors who collaborate to create particular perceptions of themselves, and a handful of recent studies suggest that team presentations of self can extend across species lines, such that humans who are responsible for particular animals may seek to control or influence how other people perceive their animals and them. For instance, there are notes on companion animals and their owners often function as teams in public settings when owners re establish social equilibrium by accounting for their dogs' actions after they misbehave. Although some "excusing tactics" refer to specific incidents of canine disobedience, they also are relevant to the ways that pit bull owners respond to their anticipation of negative perceptions of their dogs. Pit bull owners may seek to manage impressions of their dogs if they discover that their dogs, or the breed as a whole, are viewed in an unfavorable light and if they care about this negative image.
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