If your dog is sniffing your genital area, it means you have…See more

WHY DO DOGS SNIFF YOUR PRIVATE AREA?

As an animal owner, it is your responsibility to feed and take care of them. Part of being a good hooman to your pet is knowing ways to communicate with them and knowing why your pet behaves in a particular way.
There are people who know reasons why their dogs smell their private areas, but also some people aren’t yet aware what this behaviour pertains.
The reason behind dogs sniffing behaviour according to a site named Master Bowie,
“is gathering information and saying hello. We have sweat glands, apocrine glands to be precise, which release pheromones that convey all different types of information (eg. age, sex, mood, health). These glands are heavily concentrated in the armpits and genitals. Well… since they can’t reach the armpits, so crotch it is…”.
Dogs cannot speak so they have their own ways. Your dog is just trying to know you, but if you’re embarrassed with this innate behaviour, you can redirect it by training your dog; giving treats and saying basic commands such as sit, stay, etc.
Their sniffing is equivalent to asking your name, where you live, as well as shaking hands. As non-verbal species, this is their way.

Young woman hospitalized after being penitentiated…See more
My family was happy because my father remarried at 60 to a woman 30 years younger… but on his wedding night, we heard a strange scream, and what I saw when I walked in left me speechless.
When my father announced he was remarrying at 60, the whole family was surprised… but also filled with joy. After two decades of loneliness, we finally saw him smile again.
No one imagined that on his wedding night we would hear a terrifying scream that sent us running down the hall, convinced something terrible had happened. What we saw when we opened the door… we will never forget.
A man who gave up everything for his daughters
My father, Eduardo Martins, turned sixty this spring.
My mother passed away when my sister and I were still in college. Since then, for more than twenty years, he lived completely alone. He never dated again, never tried to rebuild his life. His days consisted of work, Sunday mass, and his small garden on the outskirts of Belo Horizonte.
His family always insisted:
“Eduardo, you’re still strong and healthy. No one should live alone forever.”
He would simply smile and calmly say,
“When my daughters are settled, I’ll think about myself.”
And he meant it.
The Call That Changed Everything
When my sister got married and I landed a good job in São Paulo, my father finally had time to look at his own life. One November evening, he called us with a warm, gentle, almost shy tone—a tone we hadn’t heard since my mother was alive.
“I met someone,” he said.
“Her name is Marina.”
My sister and I froze. Marina was thirty: half my father’s age.
She worked as an accountant at an insurance company, was divorced, and had no children. They had met at a yoga class for seniors at the community center.
At first, we thought the worst: “She must be after his money.” But when we finally met her… our suspicions vanished. Marina was kind, respectful, and sweet. And most importantly, she looked at my father with genuine tenderness, and he looked at her with a peace we had never seen in him before.
A simple wedding that filled our souls
The ceremony was simple, intimate, and beautiful. In the backyard of the family home, under an old mango tree adorned with warm lights. Roasted chicken, refreshments, laughter, heartfelt hugs… and a few tears that no one tried to hide.
Marina wore a light pink dress, her hair was up, and she had a gentle expression. My father looked like a young man in love: nervous, smiling, almost childlike.
While we were all helping to clear the table after the reception, my sister joked:
“Dad, try not to make too much noise tonight, okay?” The walls are thin…
Dad laughed, feigned annoyance, and said,
“Go on, mind your own business, brat.”
Then he took Marina’s hand and led her to the master bedroom, the same one he had shared with my mother for over thirty years. We had suggested redecorating it before the wedding, but he refused.
“It’s peaceful the way it is,” he replied.
The Scream That Woke Us Up at Midnight
Around midnight, a noise woke me up. I thought it was the wind… maybe a cat. But then, there was a sharp scream, so unexpected it made my skin crawl.
My sister and I looked at each other, terrified, and ran to our father’s room.
Behind the door, we heard Marina’s trembling voice:
“No! Please… don’t do that!”
I pushed open the door without thinking.
What I saw inside… left me speechless.
The scene looked like something out of a cheesy romantic comedy, not a tragedy as we had imagined.
My father was lying on the floor, covered in petals, holding what was left of a huge bouquet of flowers. He had tried to prepare a romantic surprise for Marina… but he tripped on the old rug in the room.
When he fell, the noise was so loud that Marina, half asleep, thought something terrible was happening and screamed in fright. She was sitting on the bed, one hand on her chest, her eyes wide.
But when she saw us appear, she started laughing nervously.
My father, red as a tomato, also burst out laughing as he tried to get up.
“Sorry… I think this rug has seen better days,” he joked.
A chaotic night… that became a precious memory.
We helped pick up the flowers, and, now calmer, we all sat in the living room with a mixture of relief and laughter. Minutes before, we had been imagining the worst; now we were laughing as if nothing had happened.
That night I understood:
My father’s love hadn’t died with my mother. It had only been waiting for the right moment to be reborn.
Despite the age difference, despite his fears, he and Marina were building something sincere, imperfect, and profoundly real.
They slept in each other’s arms, still laughing about the incident. And for the first time in many years… the house felt whole again, alive, happy.
The scream that chilled us to the bone that night became one of our family’s most cherished anecdotes. Proof that love, when it arrives, doesn’t matter if it comes at 20, 40, or 60… it always deserves to be celebrated.
