A New Disease

  
  We have identified a new disease,
  probably caused by a virus among
  dog owning people. It apparently has been in existence for a
  considerable time, but only recently has anyone identified this
  disease, and begun to study  it.
  

  
  A. You have the early symptoms (Stage I) if:
  
  1. You think that any show within 300 miles is nearby.
  2. You begin to enjoy getting up at 5 a.m. in the morning to walk
  and feed dogs.
  3. It is fun to spend several hours a day grooming dogs.
  4. You think you're being frugal if you spend less than $3,000 a year
  on shows.
  5. You can't remember what it was like to have just one dog.
  
  B. You definitely have the disease (Stage II) if:

  
  1. Your most important factor when buying a car is how many crates
  you can fit in it.
  2. When you look for a house, the first thing you think of is how
  many dogs you can kennel on the property.
  3. Your dog food bill is higher than your family's.
  4. You spend as much on veterinarians as on doctors.
  5.  You have no money because of showing dogs.
  6. You have to buy more than one vehicle a year, because you keep burning out
  the year or 70,000-mile warranty going to shows.
  7. You have more pictures of the dogs than of your family.
  8. Your idea of a fun vacation is to hit a show circuit.
  9. Most of your conversations revolve around the dogs.
  
  C. You are a terminal case (Stage III) if:
   
1. You wake up in
  the morning and find out that you put the kids in the crates a and the dogs in
  the beds  last night.
  2. You know each dog's name and pedigree, but can't figure out who
  that  stranger in the house is; it turns out to be your husband/wife.
  3. Your neighbors keep insisting that those kids  running around your
  house bothering the dogs are  yours.
  4. You keep telling the kids to "heel" and can't understand why
  they won't, and why they keep objecting to the choke collar.
  5. You cash in the kid's college trust fund to campaign the dogs.
  6. You've been on the road showing dogs so long that you can't
  remember where  you live.
  7. Your family tells you "It's either the dogs or us"; you choose
  the dogs.
  
  Do you have this dreaded disease? Well, there is hope. In the
  course of our  research, we have found that most cases seem to stop at
  Stage II,  and  remain  chronic. We, with great difficulty,
  managed to acquire several  Stage III ACOS patients. They are currently
  in our isolation wards, where we are  studying  them to gain a
  better understanding of this disease. It is a sad  sight, seeing
  these formerly vibrant people as they shuffle around their 
  rooms in endless triangle or L-patterns, making odd hand motions (as if 
  holding a lead and baiting a dog), and making chirping noises. Merely saying
  the word  "Crufts" can send them into an uncontrollable frenzy.
  Unfortunately, there isn't much hope for these cases, but with time and 
  research to further understand this disease, we hope to come up with a
  cure  We are now attempting to isolate the causative agent, and may be
  able to develop a vaccine in the future.
  

  
