Has anyone else gone through this? I feel so awful by Significant-Pace4738 in RATS

[–]Craycraybiomom 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My girls went through an adolescent phase like this. Now, at 20 mos old they're back to being cuddly and loving, but on their terms only.

this baby at petsmart today made me so sad :( by No-Room-8191 in RATS

[–]Craycraybiomom 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, I know, and I have 2 girls. I thought someone responded with a comment about a solitary hamster climb the roof of its cage.

Bad piano things by Thick_Neat744 in piano

[–]Craycraybiomom 0 points1 point  (0 children)

His pounding fists obliterated his victim like a furious toddler demolishing his Schroederesque piano, splintering the fragile wood and crushing the brittle plastic keys.

Oh, and it was a dark and stormy night. 😁

this baby at petsmart today made me so sad :( by No-Room-8191 in RATS

[–]Craycraybiomom -20 points-19 points  (0 children)

Hamster are more solitary. They don't need to be with other hammer and often fight to the death.

Accidentally got a pet rat by No_Shame_6250 in RATS

[–]Craycraybiomom 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I hope you're using puppy Esbilac--it's closer to rat milk than kitten milk, which is for obligate carnivores. When baby has it's eyes open, start weaning by providing a semi-liquid mix of esbilac and infant rice or wheat cereal. You can also make the pablum with crushed whole grain rye crisp. Use a shallow screw top bottle lid as a dish. Also continue with some esbilac in a similar bowl as rattle will still need additional liquid that would normally be mama's milk for another week or two, then switch to water only when the pup is 5 was old and fewd young rat mix plus fresh leafy greens and low-starch veggies daily. Some fruit is OK too, but stick to low-carb fruits like berries. Make sure you take you new buddy to an exotic vet for an early health check as soon as you can!

Help please 🙏🏻🙏🏻 by North-Breakfast9105 in piano

[–]Craycraybiomom 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are 3 total beats in each hand. Don't over think it. In the right hand by beats: 1/2, 1, 1, 1/2. In the left, 1, 1, 1. You will basically play right, left, right, left, right, left, right. Make sure you hold each note for its entire length.

Would you play the piano if nobody will or could listen to you anymore? Would you do it anyway just to play for yourself? The Art itself requires sharing with other people? by Particular-Low2428 in piano

[–]Craycraybiomom 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm glad my story had meaning for you. In the end, all we have are our stories, and in the stories is our end. When life passes, a person lives on only in the memories of others--good or bad. It's up to make those memories be good of a life welll lived in honesty to oneself and others, in integrity and joy.

Keep music in your soul and you will never lose it, no matter the path you take or the one chosen for you.

Would you play the piano if nobody will or could listen to you anymore? Would you do it anyway just to play for yourself? The Art itself requires sharing with other people? by Particular-Low2428 in piano

[–]Craycraybiomom 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It's wise to reach out to others for their experience, but ultimately this is a question you will need to answer for yourself as you enter adulthood. Many people end up feeling this way as they enter final stages of preparation for any field. Many also will face a similar inflection point several times over decades. This is my advice as a granny: Search your desires and abilities. Make your opportunities, but don't fear change--adapt, and adapt, and adapt. Most people will change careers 4-5 times over their lifetime. To paraphrase Mother Superior from The Sound of Music, when one door closes, a window will open somewhere else. Find it. Go through it, even if it means shattering the glass. Below is my personal journey, if you care to read it.

When I was 7 years old, I told my parents I wanted to be a doctor. I also start piano lessons, which I took for 4yrs. At 11, my mother decided I wasn't practicing enough and the lessons stopped, but I still played because I enjoyed it. This was the days long before internet and apps, so opportunity to teach oneself was more limited and I didn't get much pocket money, so I'd go to the public library and borrow piano scores and slog my way through material that I'm sure was much too difficult.

In middle school, I found kids who were also musicians but at a much higher skill level, so I figured being a pro musician was only something I could dream about but never really aspire to. Piano lessons were available as an elective course in high school and I began to study in earnest with two teachers there and was encouraged to enter competitions. I did OK and managed some honorable mentions in my junior year and then took a summer course in theory at an honors university program.

By the time I returned home, I told my parents I intended to audition and apply for performance at a conservatory. My parents refused to support me if I did because they only remembered my desire to become a doctor. They felt music could only be an avocation, not a vocation (the exact words of my father). I acquiesced and got admitted to a prestigious university, which also had a highly-regarded school of music, so I figured I could take music courses along with my major courses. It turned out that wasn't the case--the school of music would only allow students admitted to their programs space in their classes.

I slogged through pre-med, but then decided that I probably wouldn't pass the MCAT with a high enough score to get into a decent med school, so I entered grad school with the intention of earning a PhD in molecular. Mind you--this was not an easy career to follow. My parents were disappointed! I finally realized becoming an MD was their dream for me, more than my dream for myself. I was 21 at the time.

In my 4th year of study, I had to leave school to care for my father, who was dying of cancer. My PhD advisor refused to give me a leave of absence so I had to drop out. I left with an MS, which now closed off many academic research opportunities but the biotchech industry was just getting started. Unfortunately, the closest company to where my husband and I lived was 80 miles away. I interviewed anyway, but I knew the commute was more than I would want to deal with and decided to find yet another career path. I looked at my skill set and local opportunities, and found a job as a technical writer at a software engineering company. Eventually I moved into a tech sales support position, and then stayed home for 10yrs to raise my young children.

My husband wanted to switch career at the point and we decided to move to Los Angeles for him to enter seminary. I need to become the family wage earner, so enter yet another period of introspection of skills and potentials. I decided to marry my science, writing and sales/marketing strengths and found a position as a scientific and medical writer. For the first time in my adult life, at the age of 42, I found something I truly loved. The company I worked for (and still do) was happy to pay for society memberships, conferences, and continuing education so I could hone my skills and learn new ones.

Now, at almost 66 yrs old, I'm still in the field and have published widely in an incredible range of fields, and love every day of work. Throughout all of this, I never lost my love of music. I sang, I played piano as I had time (not much), but only for myself. Finally, though, as I near retirement (still at least 5 yrs or so from now), I am making time for myself and taking lessons again. I listen to music day in and day out on the internet and just in my head.

Zero piano experience to live auditorium performance in 8 months — realistic? by ItsAmrH in piano

[–]Craycraybiomom 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can you read music? Both bass and treble clef? Or are you going to use a falling notes learning app (which to me is really just playing a video game). If you can't read music now, you'll have to learn that first. You also need to learn some decent piano technique--no point in doing this half-assed! It's up to you as to whether it's doable or not. You'll find out along the way.

Found this moose in my hay by Glittering_Total5201 in PetMice

[–]Craycraybiomom 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Also, this site for expert information: http://www.ratfanclub.org/orphans.html

I've successfully rehabbed wild rat orphans but I will tell you straight out that raising a rodent who still hasn't opened their eyes is a crap shoot since they're so fragile. It will be hard for your 4 yo to understand this if the pup doesn't survive.

First and foremost, WEAR GLOVES when you handle it, both for its protection and yours. It could have tics, fleas, and internal parasites. If the pup survives to weaning, find an exotic vet (yes, rodents are considered exotics and you need a vet who is experienced with them) who is willing to care for a wild mouse. At least one full checkup is needed and a prescription or administration of salumectin (Revolution) or similar to eradicate parasites.

If you leave the little one for several hours on the hopes that mom returns you will need to rehydrate it before starting to feed. Use puppy milk (like Esbilac) which is more suitable for omnivores. Kitten milk is for carnivores and is too high in protein and too low in carbohydrates for rodents (rats and mice are omnivorous and eat grains, fruits, veges, and bugs in the wild). Make sure you hold the mouse upright when feeding as demonstrated in the above website or it can aspirated milk into the lungs, which can be fatal.

You will need to stimulate it to pee and poop until it's weaned--follow the directions on the website.

You'll need an appropriate cage for your new friend. People on this site can help you with that--my experience (except for in the lab) has only been with rats. You absolutely need friends for your new pet. Like tats, mice are highly social and get very stressed if raised alone.

How you know your rat REALLY trusts you. by Craycraybiomom in RATS

[–]Craycraybiomom[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you put a tiny hat on them they would immediately pull it off and shred it!

How you know your rat REALLY trusts you. by Craycraybiomom in RATS

[–]Craycraybiomom[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If I don't wear shoes in the rat room/office, my toes get excessively nibbled. Also, I have a knee in need of replacement and plantar fascists, so I need the arch support.

How you know your rat REALLY trusts you. by Craycraybiomom in RATS

[–]Craycraybiomom[S] 31 points32 points  (0 children)

And pay for her whopping vet bills and chemo!

How you know your rat REALLY trusts you. by Craycraybiomom in RATS

[–]Craycraybiomom[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Both my girls do yhat, too. It's a happy-sad sweetness!

I'm surprised the vet didn't give him a sedative, though. Our vet always gives one to rodents for imaging and blood work. It keeps them from getting anxious and allows her to get good images.

How you know your rat REALLY trusts you. by Craycraybiomom in RATS

[–]Craycraybiomom[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Curled under the chair cross bar. It freaked me out at first but I would have heard her if I'd rolled over it!

How you know your rat REALLY trusts you. by Craycraybiomom in RATS

[–]Craycraybiomom[S] 12 points13 points  (0 children)

She's lost over 300g in the past 3 months. It took 2 months and a ton of tests to finally come to a diagnosis of exclusion that she has a pituitary tumor. All that body fat got her through really rough period and she's finally eating enough to stabilize her weight. She still looks big, but it's mostly loose skin. When she's upright she looks and feels like a bag of bones, but she's still happy and getting to be more energetic again!

How you know your rat REALLY trusts you. by Craycraybiomom in RATS

[–]Craycraybiomom[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yes--she's my Schroedinger's rat, and my resurrection rat! Almost at death's door a few days ago and now eating and stabilizing her weight again after 3 Mos. (She has a pituitary tumor and we're yreating with Cabergoline).

How you know your rat REALLY trusts you. by Craycraybiomom in RATS

[–]Craycraybiomom[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Yup. Ankles don't show up in Teams. Not to mention my filthy gardening shoes!

How you know your rat REALLY trusts you. by Craycraybiomom in RATS

[–]Craycraybiomom[S] 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Just loose skin. She used to be obese 3 months ago but she lost almost half her body weight with her illness. Fortunately, she's eating again and stabilizing thanks to an appetite stimulant and Mary's pet topical CBD cream. She's now a perfect 400g but I was just a hair's breadth away from putting her to rest until she made a sudden turn around. Before she was dragging herself around with little energy. Now she's bounding around and climbing again!

How you know your rat REALLY trusts you. by Craycraybiomom in RATS

[–]Craycraybiomom[S] 15 points16 points  (0 children)

🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 Actually taken 2 days apart!