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Keeping my dog under the radar at potential new apartment dwelling

tunguska

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hi all,

I asked the question: Will we have to worry about getting evicted if we move into the (name deleted) apartments?

and the result was:

30 changing to 62,

but the changing lines are:

Changing Lines
Line 1

‘Treading in confusion.
Honour it – not a mistake.’
Line 6

‘The king uses this to march out,
There are honours.
He executes the chief – the captives are not so ugly.
Not a mistake.’


My boyfriend and I have a stressful situation - we have to move, and we have to find
a cheap place, but we also have a pit bull mix dog, and nobody will take such a
dog into an apartment any more, no matter how nice or well behaved she is.
It's the insurance companies that are behind this.

So we did find a place that at least takes large dogs, and did not question me at all
when I said that she is a labrador mix. Which she is. In fact they will allow up
to 2 large dogs, but there are also stories about the management being a bit
eviction happy. Both of the stories are not legally plausible (I've been reading up
this). But the fact that the dog is part pit bull could set us up for an unpleasant
3 day eviction. It all depends on how vigilant they are at this place.

Wheer I am living now is not vigilant about it at all, but we have to get out.
We are being kicked out for an issue over a package that they lost.
So I know not all places are vigilant about the dogs in the apartment complex.

Ok, so I am pretty new to the i ching, but does this reading seem positive?
I am thinking and hoping that it is.

Thanks for your thoughts!
 

meng

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What I'm seeing is quiet a bit of chaos if you bring your dog into this environment. If you fit in with that kind of place, it should be ok for you. You'd have to ask your dog how he/she feels about it.

Thing is, powerful dogs require exercise, and if they don't get it, they can develop behavioral problems. That's only natural too, chaos with several big dogs within a confined sectioned off space, with scent from other dogs throughout the building. I sure wouldn't do it, but some do. So laying low (62) can be hard to do, with all those big dogs walking by. But it really depends on whether they have been well socialized. But that still would require regular exercise otherwise they're likely to want to fight, get all territorial, tails sticking up like flagpoles.

The chaos I get from line 1. It's a fuzziness, not all there, feeling a little lost when the lights get turned on. Just my impression, fwiw.
 

tunguska

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Hmm...I don't know what else I can do. We are in a tight spot.

My dog is old and tired. I do have experience with keeping her away from other dogs.
I had some problems where I am with little chihuahuas accosting her, because
people don't follow the rules and keep them on a leash.

I went to look at the place today, and am thinking the thing to do would be
to get situated in a building that is near the back, or near the side street,
where it would be easy to get her out of the whole complex quickly, and then
just walk her in the neighborhood. Away from the complex.

She is not looking to have a lot of exercise to get rid of pent-up energy -
she is old with arthritis. She doesn't have a lot of pent-up energy.

Well, I'll just go meet them and see how it goes.

Thanks for your thoughts!
 

meng

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Thanks for yours too. That sounds good, what you'd described. The details fill in the color by numbers more too. I can see more of the 30 in there now.

I wish you and your pooch find a happy dwelling.
 

Clarity,
Office 17622,
PO Box 6945,
London.
W1A 6US
United Kingdom

Phone/ Voicemail:
+44 (0)20 3287 3053 (UK)
+1 (561) 459-4758 (US).

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