THE MUSICAL MUSE

Blog dedicated to music education, practice tips, health
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wellness, and geeking out.

Recreation, Pets, Health & Wellness Rhona-Mae Arca Recreation, Pets, Health & Wellness Rhona-Mae Arca

Volunteering to Help with Animals

Volunteering with animals - whether it is to help animals in need or you are volunteering with your pet - can be a rewarding experience for both you and your pet.

If you are an animal lover, perhaps you've thought about ways that you could volunteer with animals. Or perhaps you are looking for ways to volunteer with your pet.

There are many ways that you (and your pet) can help our furry, scaly and feathered friends. These are just some of the areas that you could lend a helping hand: administrative support, animal care, animal transport and special events.

Opportunities to Volunteer with Animals in Calgary

To ensure that most of donors' contributions go to caring for animals in need, animal shelters and societies rely on caring volunteers to help with office administration. For instance, the Calgary Humane Society gladly welcomes volunteers to assist with office reception. Pawsitive Match Rescue Foundation and Oops-a-Dazy Rescue and Sanctuary Society have several areas to help with everything from pet insurance administration to marketing. The Animal Rescue Foundation relies on responsible volunteers to interview families for the pet adoption program.

For those who want more hands-on experience helping animals, volunteers can help with picking up animals that have been found in the wild, attending to animals' daily needs or ensuring that the needed supplies are on-hand. Dog walking, laundry and cleaning are other areas of animal care that would benefit from volunteer assistance.

Volunteers can also help by fostering animals. Foster families provide a safe environment for an animal as well as prepare them for the adoption program.

Most animal organizations run fundraising events on an annual basis. This can take the form of a casino, a fun run or an auction. People can assist as event volunteers or on the organizing committee.

Opportunities to Volunteer with Your Pet

There are numerous ways that you can volunteer with your pet. When Maestro was younger, we participated in the SPCA Dog Jog as well as the Fathers' Day Walk:

You and your pet can also foster animals. Your pet is your number one assistant in socializing a rescued animal before he or she is adopted.

Another area that you and your pet can help the community is by providing animal therapy. You would work together as a team, bringing smiles and comforting long-term care patients.

Volunteering with animals - whether it is to help animals in need or you are volunteering with your pet - can be a rewarding experience for both you and your pet. For more information, check out the books and links listed below.

Related Reading:

6 Ways to Volunteer with Your Pet by Sidney Stevens (Mother Nature Network)

A Guide to Volunteering with Your Pet (Healthy Pet)

Five Ways to Volunteer with Your Dog by Cesar Milan (Cesar's Way)

The Unusual Diary of an Animal Shelter Volunteer (book)

Volunteering to Help with Animals (book)

Wanted!: Animal Volunteers (book)

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Music, Practicing Music Rhona-Mae Arca Music, Practicing Music Rhona-Mae Arca

Professional Musicians Talk About Practicing

I tracked down three neat (and short) video clips of professional musicians discussing practicing music. There's some neat practice tips and ideas.

It's always neat to hear what advice other people have to share about something you do. I've tracked down a few short interviews with professional musicians discussing practicing music. Enjoy! Conrad Doucette, Musician and Music Journalist on Creative Ways to Practice Your Instrument:

Violinist Midori on Practicing:

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Health & Wellness Rhona-Mae Arca Health & Wellness Rhona-Mae Arca

Reunions and Reflections

A reunion dinner with my schoolmates inspired some reflections about connections, influences and relationships.

Last week, I met with some of my classmates from my childhood school days. Not just high school, but junior high. Not just junior high, but elementary (small towns, small classes). I hadn't seen some of them since our 20 year reunion and in some cases, since graduation.

It was a good visit. In addition spending a pleasant evening in good company, I left with three things to ponder, which I'll share:

Some Things Don't Change Over Time

A generation has passed. Many of my classmates have children who have grown up and started families of their own. Others have remarried, while others still are single.

Yet, we can sit together and chat like school was yesterday. Which is interesting in itself because those of us who gathered weren't all from the same "clique" in school. Yet, there was no awkwardness, just the joy of catching up and spending time together.

No matter how much time changes, our inner core remains essentially the same. So we could agree on who's really nice and who is still a jerk. Not only that, we could just explain things away with, "C'mon. You know my parents..."

How Well Did We Know Each Other?

That was a big theme over dinner. Some lost one or both parents at a fairly young age. There were a few teen pregnancies, resulting in those students disappearing for a while.  Others faced challenges we knew nothing about. We attended classes together and had no idea of the pain that these folks were going through. Now, as adults, we look back on what happened to some of our classmates with a deeper sensitivity and understanding.

Between reconnecting with classmates at this dinner and through Facebook, I've been surprised to see that I share many common interests with classmates I hardly spoken to when we were younger. For most of us, these are passions and hobbies we've pursued since childhood but we just didn't know since we weren't revolving around the same circles. Therefore, it's a blessing to reconnect as adults and enjoy these connections with a greater appreciation.

One Word, One Act Can Influence a Lifetime

One of my classmates said that she can look at each of us from our grad class and remember something about us. Not only that, she said that each of us has touched her life in some way and has shaped who she is now.

Whether it's a classmate or a coworker, neighbour or fellow volunteer - we each touch each other's lives - for better or for worse. It could be just for a moment or a day, or it could be over years, but the impact can result in something big.

I don't know about you, but that makes me think about how I affect those around me. Am I affecting someone for better or for worse? If it's the latter, what am I going to do about it?

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Lesson Planning - A Work in Progress

Part of me is worried that I haven't buckled down to do some major planning for the upcoming teaching year, but as I declutter, I am making some progress in the planning department.

Work in Progress

The big decluttering project continues. It's taken years to amass all this paper and stuff so I guess I shouldn't be surprised that it will take a while to clean up my mess. It seems though, that no sooner do I get my office tidied up that it becomes a bigger mess as soon as I tackle a new section in my office. Case in point:

Amidst the chaos however, plans are beginning to emerge. As I file handouts and documents from the previous teaching year, ideas for new handouts and teaching strategies are percolating in my mind.

However, I don't want to break the flow of my clean up (I refuse to start another teaching year with a messy office); so, I have three medium-sized coloured sheets, labelled: "Lesson Strategies/Planning", "Handouts to Make" and "To Do" on top of one of the binders in the lower LH corner.My tin of Crayola® markers are also close by.

So far, I've jotted down things like, "How to make technique more fun," "Strategies for helping the Keyboard Geography/Hand-Eye Coordination Challenged Students" and a long list of optional activities.

For the time being, I just grab the appropriate sheet and jot down a phrase. Once I get that tower beside my desk emptied out, then I can hunker down and transform the ideas into something tangible. I imagine that by the time I reach that point, I'll have more than three sheets of ideas. At least, it will be easier to focus as by then, I'll have a less cluttered workspace.

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Entrepreneurship, Productivity Rhona-Mae Arca Entrepreneurship, Productivity Rhona-Mae Arca

Lessons in Email Management

As I struggle to clean up my email in-boxes, I decide it's high time to search for ways to manage my emails effectively.

Please tell me that I'm not the only one struggling with keeping my email in-boxes tidy. Managing emails seems to be an ongoing battle. One that I feel like I'm losing.

With a new school year fast approaching, I really want to get a handle on this. I found some articles that with some email management tips. I look forward to applying the "Two-Minute" Rule". I suppose I should create some rules too for newsletters:

A Simple Guide to Managing Your Email

Managing Email Effectively

10 Tips to Manage Email Effectively

Do you have any tips on how to manage your email that isn't mentioned in these articles? Please share.

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