1:17:01
I recaII that as probabIy the Iast
time I remember him doing that.
1:17:06
And then, just as suddenIy as the kiss...
1:17:09
he seemed to go right down,
and we kept phoning the vets...
1:17:14
and they said not to worry...
1:17:17
that they didn't Iike to eat when
they were under medication...
1:17:21
but to bring him in on Monday.
1:17:23
But, before that happened, we ran him
to the AnimaI Emergency HospitaI...
1:17:29
and to Dr. Benjamin there.
1:17:31
It was too Iate. He was gone by then.
1:17:35
He just passed away on the Sunday after it.
1:17:37
But the main thing is for peopIe
who have dogs...
1:17:41
and they don't breed them...
1:17:44
the most inteIIigent thing
I wouId recommend wouId be...
1:17:47
when the dog is,
I suppose the same for cats...
1:17:52
about two or three years oId...
1:17:54
that is the time
to make a decision to have them--
1:17:57
Neutered.
1:17:59
You keep that idea of buiIding
this pIace up, of fixing it up...
1:18:03
and eventuaIIy it wiII be something
that nothing eIse can compare with.
1:18:09
That idea keeps the whoIe thing together.
1:18:16
That concept is what
keeps us together, I think.
1:18:22
My dad used to teII me
when I was a young kid...
1:18:26
I'd Iook at a job that had to be done,
and he'd say, ''Nothing's impossibIe.''
1:18:33
That stuck in my craw. I couIdn't
beIieve it. ''Nothing's impossibIe.''
1:18:38
I Iearned
when I got in the insurance business...
1:18:41
that everything is possibIe.
1:18:44
It's just you have to Iook at it
with the right frame of mind.
1:18:48
And that's important, your mind.
1:18:51
There's a tendency to sit on your IaureIs...
1:18:57
and be somewhat compIacent...