@iam_cloud
Well-Known Member
My dog is so important to me that I generally don't go anywhere she can't go. She is an enormous comfort to me and I do wish she were actually a service dog. She is a Lab, but unusually small and only 41 pounds. I would pay to have her trained to behave quietly at all times if she could be certified. She is a wonderful dog but very high spirited and absolutely LOVES all humans and other dogs. I have taken her to obedience and she is plenty smart. However, I am not a good alpha to a dog even though I do everything I have been told to make the dog see me as an alpha. I think I just love dogs too much and don't convey the appropriate strength to them. If I thought I could get her declared a service dog I would pay a lot of money for the two of us to learn how to work together better. She does everything the trainer tells her so I know it is my behavior that requires changing. Is there some guideline I can find as to what I have to do to be allowed to have a service dog as an Aspie? If so, maybe she and I could be trained so that she would be appropriately calm around other people and dogs and not try to play with them without my permission. If I were accompanied by a dog in a service harness I believe I would be treated less judgmentally by the public and feel more confident. It is my understanding that people can't ask someone with a certified service dog why they need the dog. Not being physically handicapped, blind or deaf tends to make people think you don't have just cause for a therapy dog. Actually, I am so dedicated to educating the public regarding AS that I wouldn't mind answering such a question. Everything about living for me is easier when my dog is with me.
For all those in the US, the ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act) states that no one can ask you for proof that your dog is a service dog unless (s)he is causing trouble. Also, I know that in California it's pretty easy to get a service tag for your dog. I'm pretty sure it's similar in New York. Here all you need is a dog license and a service dog prescription from a medical doctor.