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I swear pet friendly hotels are run by zoophiles

RVgirl

Tourist
I travel all the time. Live out of an RV. On occasion when it needs repairs my dog and I will get a hotel. Maybe my experiences are totally coincidental since I've only stayed in a handful hotels. But when I do I swear they are run by fellow zoos. The girl that checked me in I swear gave me a little smirk looking at my dog then back to me when she said she hopes i enjoy my stay. When it comes to cleaning I feel like they do enough to make it tidy but definitely don't get all the smells out. My dog pretty immediately is sniffing down the halls, sniffing the room and clearly the smells are getting him excited.
Anyone else have similar experiences? Maybe I just ended up at a great place but it's happened more than once that I feel like these places are run for a particular reason
 
Haha you might be right! I feel like there are definitely things that tip you off. But it would make life so much easier if zoodar was real lol
Only if other zoo's had it! I'd be terrified to go out and have a non-zoo look at me and my dog and say "he fucks her I know it"!
 
As a person with a background in body language and profiling, one thing I've noticed from the time I started my training and now is that I now catch onto a lot of nonverbal communication most people just don't see. I've been at bars and had people come up to me to ask if they can pet my dog and I'll immediately know just by looking at them whether they're zoo or not. You call it zoodar, we call it non-verbal cues. The part of the brain that communicates non-verbally is vary old and well developed. Our mammalian brains developed this amazing ability to communicate wirelessly with other bodies on the back end so you don't need to think about it. Now imagine the countless hours spent flexing this skill like a muscle. All the time on target. You get really good at seeing through people.

I like to give the example of a group of horses in a field. One horse hears something moving in the tall grass and so he lifts his head quickly. The rest of the herd will immediately and instinctively do the same thing. We as humans also do this when we perceive a possible threat. Now that we rely so heavily on our neocortex, the other part of our brain has become a bit dusty. It still works but our neocortex has a hard time putting that into words because of how new that skill is.

For example we know when somebody feels off and creepy but we don't know why. It's their body telling your brain that this person doesn't trust himself and neither should you. It's a blessing and a curse at times to have this level of training. But yeah, to answer your question, I do see zoos all over. They typically work around animals. I just never confront them about it as tempting as it may be to make more zoo friends. When I see a zoo and their dog walk by, I just smile and think to myself "thats a cute couple". 😄
 
I realize its 100% confirmation bias (or whatever its called). But I always stay in pet friendly hotels on work trips and everytime I see a single man or female enter a hotel room with their dog, I immediately think they are banging 🤣

There was once a wifi hotspot called "Knock for dog sex!"
If it wasn't such a pain in the cock to have to reconnect all my devices, I'd rename my wifi to that.
 
the line between zoophile and animal lover is really really blurry. we understand others by putting ourself in their shoes, but can quickly turn to projection. identifying fellow zoos is always a tricky gamble.

I realize its 100% confirmation bias (or whatever its called). But I always stay in pet friendly hotels on work trips and everytime I see a single man or female enter a hotel room with their dog, I immediately think they are banging 🤣

There was once a wifi hotspot called "Knock for dog sex!"
i like to imagine the same thing, lol, if only because it's kind of hot :p
 
But yeah, to answer your question, I do see zoos all over. They typically work around animals. I just never confront them about it as tempting as it may be to make more zoo friends. When I see a zoo and their dog walk by, I just smile and think to myself "thats a cute couple". 😄
I'm curious, do you think you can tell the difference between a person who is just really emotionally connected to animals (e.g. loves them), and someone who takes it a step further?

Because I genuinely believe there are people who have a very strong affinity for animals without having any of the sexual attraction to them.
 
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