Saturday, January 10, 2015

Let Sleeping Dogs Lie

I was not unlike most children when it came to animals (except for horses…those things are gigantic and horrifying).  I rarely met an animal I didn’t want to bring home and care for until my parents discovered it, saw the level of responsibility I had shown, and allow me to keep it as my pet.  Things never really panned out that way for me, though.
I blame my parents for making me like animals so much.  When I was born, they had two pitbulls, a male and a female.  The girl wouldn’t go anywhere without a blanket with which she would cover herself when she reached her destination.  One of my first memories is sitting on the porch with them walking around me.  Eventually, one got into a fight with a neighbor’s dog and the neighbors made my dad put them down.
There were also about a million cats living under our porch.  Every night, after dinner, my mom would toss out the leftovers “for the kittens.”  While most of them were fully grown, there were always kittens because those incestuous perverts were definitely not fixed.  My dad, however, hated cats and had plenty of methods of population control before I knew that PETA or the ASPCA existed. 
Be cool, dude...

After the divorce, the tiny pride made their way over to our neighbor’s house.  My best friend lived there, but I never liked going there because it smelled horrible.  Honestly, it’s probably for the best that my parents split up, otherwise I would’ve had much higher chances of being the smelly kid.  It’s about time I found an upside considering those jerks insisted on having holidays and birthdays together.  Think about it: I have to constantly explain that my parents are divorced but I never once got two Christmases or two birthdays.  They never competed for my love with gifts or money.  They were clearly the worst.
My first real pet was only mine for about a month.  He was a half-Rottweiler/half-German Shepard puppy.  In what was to become a trend of me picking out terribly unoriginal pet names, I dubbed him Rex.  I loved him more than anyone or anything in my life.  He was always trying to sleep (as puppies do), but when he would get up, I would follow him around the house with a curiosity normally reserved to urchins on a journey to see a dead body out by the train tracks.  That’s right.  I followed him.  I was an only child.
Rex ate everything he could tear into mouth-sized bits.  One time, I watched him eat an old dishrag, vomit it up, and then eat it again.  I was in awe.
A buffet for my first dog
My mother, on the other hand, was not.  She was a single mother working 50+ hours and a new puppy wasn’t really something she was ready to keep alive.  After that one magical, vomit-y month, Rex went to my brother’s best friend’s house.  Hopefully Little Larry gave him a better name.
After Rex, I was devastated.  I didn’t understand why my dog was going to live with someone else.  I had so much love to give.  So many places to watch him walk.  So many things to watch him eat and regurgitate!  This time, my dad took the reins.
Ruff (yes, I named him Ruff…because that was the noise he made.  I already explained that I wasn’t good at this.  I’m done apologizing.), was a golden lab.  When I was at my dad’s, he and I did everything together.  He even grew to my height in only a few short months.  By that point, he could go swimming with me.  He even learned how to rescue people who were drowning.  Unfortunately, he never really knew the difference between drowning and regular swimming.  Also, his rescue method consisted of pushing you under the water and scratching the hell out of you.
His tail literally never stopped wagging.  For instance, one night, while Dad was playing darts with me in the garage, Ruff stood too close to the wood-burning stove and burnt his tail on the one section that kept hitting the stove.  I don’t mean to insinuate that he just singed his hair.  He had a hairless scar on that part of his tail for the rest of his life.  Ruff was not the smartest dog, but he was mine.
Ruff’s brother lived next door for a couple of years.  Those two did NOT get along.  They would get into full-blown fights while I stood and watched in horror.  I would’ve run and separated them, but I never got to know Ruff’s brother and I’ve never trusted strange dogs.  That’s my mom’s fault.
Ruff's asshole brother...Look at him, clearly instigating.

Before my parents’ divorce (so age four or younger), my mom and I would walk to the mailbox if the weather was nice.  In the country, all of the mailboxes for everyone on the road are at the beginning of the road.  We lived on the opposite end.  This was more involved than simply walking to the end of the driveway. 
On the day that stole my dog trust, a neighbor’s dog, Shadow, was lying in the middle of the road.  Since only three cars regularly used that road, this wasn’t odd or dangerous.  On the way to the mailbox, Shadow was asleep and I walked right past him.  On the way back, however, something felt different.  I slowed and my mom walked past him.  I stopped a few feet back and told my mom I was scared to walk past him.  I looked in her eyes and told her I thought he was going to bite me.  I still don’t know how I knew this.  Maybe he was quietly growling.  Maybe I’m a pet psychic.  Maybe my fear caused it (though I’ve always found that to be a dickish assumption…very victim blame-y).
Conjecture aside, my mom told me Shadow was asleep and to walk.  She told me I would be fine.  I took a few reluctant steps and Shadow made his move.  I was rolling around in a ball of black fur and pain.  I don’t remember much else until my mom set me into an ice bath.  I still think of Shadow when I see someone in a movie get set into an ice bath (especially The Secret Garden).
Therefore, Ruff was on his own until I could go get my dad.
One day, while in the garage that my dad used for both recreation and work (he had tons of printing equipment in there.  I think he did some side printing jobs while he was working at Graphics Packaging.  I’m not sure, and at this point, I’m too afraid to ask.  Anyway, this is a huge garage.  It’s detached and made for two cars.  There are also two rooms in the back.  One was an office and the other had another garage door big enough for a compact car.) I heard a mew coming from the back.  That was odd because that’s where I kept my ATV.  I was nine years old by this point and spent a fair amount of time at my dad’s just wandering around.  I went into the back to investigate, but couldn’t locate the sound.  Then, I heard it again.  It seemed like it was coming from the rafters near the door I had just come in.  I walked to the door and looked up just as I heard a shuffling.  I held out my hands just in time for a tiny gray kitten to fall into them.  It was like magic.  I don't even know why I held out my hands.  I didn't see anything fall.  I just caught a kitten that materialized out of thin air.  Like a boss.
Since cats falling from the ceiling was new territory for me, I ran and got my dad.  He found three more nestled on top of a thick, wooden door frame.  The momma cat was nowhere to be found.  He got a box and set them in there, but they were so little that we couldn’t get them to drink milk out of a bowl and their mom never came back. When I went back to my mom’s, miraculously, the kittens came along for the ride.  My mom set them up a little nest with an old stuffed animal for them to cuddle.  She managed to get them to drink out of a dropper for a while, but it wasn’t incredibly successful.  One day, they weren’t there when I got home.  I didn’t get a chance to think of names.  That was actually probably better for them.
My mom was over pets for a long time after that.  Then came Christmas when I was twelve.  My mom walked into the house with her best friend, Lisa.  They looked really happy, the way people look around small children that must be instinctual because it seems reflexive.  Lisa sat down next to me and put her brown, leather purse in between us.  My mom said I had a surprise and it was in the purse.  I could see something white sticking out of both ends.  Beanie Babies were really popular during this time, so I started to sum up the energy to pretend to love it when Lisa yelled, “Hurry up before it pees in my purse!”
I lifted the flap and saw a tiny, white Maltese puppy looking back at me.  I was definitely excited because I always wanted a pet at my mom’s house, but she was so little.  I was always tall for my age and I wasn’t the most graceful child.  I was worried I’d break her.  I treated that pup like a Faberge Egg.  I also took my time naming her because by this point, I was smart enough to realize I’m terrible at naming animals.  Eventually, my mom got tired of me “dragging my feet” on the subject and named her Stephie.  She thought that “Stevie and Stephie” would be super cute.  The feeling you’re squirming around with right now is an amalgamation of pity, discomfort and maybe just a dash of endearment depending on how affected you are.
Definitely not my sister, mom!

My worry about breaking Stephie never really went away.  She eventually bonded with my mom far more than she had with me and for that reason, I don’t consider Stephie my dog.  She was always really my mom’s.  She never shed and would always growl/bark/bite if anyone got too close to my mom.  I eventually resented her because she was so loud and yippy.  The only thing I can really say for her at this point is that she kept my mom company when I moved out and went to college.  Now, when I come home to visit, the house still feels empty without her.
Ruff is also gone. My dad has a new golden lab, Brody. He’s just as stupid, but I don’t see the same love in his eyes.  I refuse to swim in that particular lake anymore, so I have no idea what his lifesaving skills are like.
Getting to grow up surrounded by animals is definitely one of the benefits of growing up in the country.  I’m glad I got to experience it, even if it was only part-time for most of my developmental years.  I’m also glad I eventually wore my mom down and got a dog in town.  This is the same woman who nursed a wounded squirrel back to health in a cage in her trailer with my dad, so she definitely needed to have animals in her life again.  Oh, and don’t worry. The squirrel can definitely be seen in some of their wedding photos.