Happy Thursday, lovers!
I have a confession to make. Sometimes in your twenties, you
get pretty desperate for money. By “you” I probably mean me. There are only so
many internal organs one can comfortably survive without. An even smaller percentage
of said organs are worth anything on the black market. Also. Sometimes your
tires, eyeballs, and wardrobe all need to be replaced. These things cost money, which is a real bitch when you spent your last dollas on a plane
ticket home. This month my financial options shook out to giving hand jobs on 82nd or house-sitting for my
boss. Desperate times, desperate measures right? As such, I’m currently the
indentured servant/maid/bitch of two very small dogs.
I know what you’re thinking, and you're wrong. Don’t give me
that “oh they’re so cute and you’re getting paid to play with puppies”
bullshit. You guys, these dogs aren’t terriers. They’re terrorists and they’re
waging war on my sanity. I used to think I was a dog person. I’ve changed my
mind.
The trouble all started when I
forgot to be a superstitious human. Normally I’m on the ball. Spilled salt
always goes over my left shoulder, and I avoid crossing paths with black cats. There
are ways a sane human being just doesn’t tempt fate. Like stating something
with absolute certainty and not knocking on wood.
(Example: “Dog-sitting always reminds me
why I love being a cat owner. Cats are so low maintenance! I could leave mine
alone for ten minutes or ten days and she’d be just as irritated to see me when
I came home”.)
Or picking up a facedown penny.
Particularly in the Tik Tok parking lot on a sunny Saturday morning when you
have lots of plans. Maybe it was the weather, or the Bloody Mary bar, or Tik
Tok’s Cinco de Mayo breakfast specials with homemade guacamole. I’ll
never know for sure, but I got careless. When you combine
stupid assertions with inevitable bad luck, you’re asking for trouble.
When we checked on That Cat
before commencing our Sunny Saturday plans, Lew and I discovered she was busily trying
to die. Glazed eyes, voiceless meow, tried-to-jump-into-the-window-sill-but-missed-and-slid-down-the-wall
trying to die.
You guys. When life is slowest I’ve
occasionally wondered how I would behave in stressful situations. I like to
imagine myself a stoic, making careful and objective decisions. Unfortunately,
it turns out my first impulse is to laugh uncontrollably. My second impulse is
to flail about ineffectually and maybe do more harming than helping. Luckily
Lew kept me from killing Murphy in my efforts to save her. She held my hand, righted
the upside-down cat purse when my too-fast corners sent it flying across the
backseat, and gave me play-by-play updates on That Cat’s status.
After a physical exam, subcutaneous fluids, and a shot of
steroids the doctor told me I needed to give That Cat antibiotics twice daily
and shouldn’t leave her alone overnight... Thus began the turf wars: terriers in
the loft, Murphy locked in my bedroom.
A Brief Compilation of Observable Terrier Facts:
1. Terriers
possess two different fuel reserves. They use one for general existence things
like breathing, eating, walking, etc. They reserve their secondary and
potentially limitless energy reserve for driving their house-sitters fucking
insane.
2. Preferred
terrier activities include nose-whistling, running laps around the living room
and barking at neighborhood children, cats, shadows, pieces of lint, and
imaginary shadow creatures threatening your safety.
3. Terriers
are capable of forgoing food, water, and sleep if there is any potential they
will be able to stalk, mangle, or otherwise interact violently with a cat.
4. Terriers
can comfortably knock a full plate of caprese salad onto the floor in the time
it takes you to grab the pepper shaker. They will not eat said salad, because
vegetables. But they will have spoiled it for you. This is enough.
5. While
we’re on the subject of terrier speed: they can de-bag a garbage can, clean a
litter box, and eat chicken poop off the porch in the blink of an eye.
6. Terriers’
weaknesses include four-year olds, inflatable swimming pools, and “terrier
barriers” (constructed entirely out of empty cat litter cartons and 10 lb.
dumbbells).
7. Not
all terriers are built equal. Sorry Doris.
There’s a story from my childhood that may or may not be a
memory. We had a cat that loved to play with plastic bags. At night. When
everybody was trying to be asleep. Plastic bags were especially wonderful if we
had to wake up early. The earlier the better, right? It’s a plastic bag party! Err’body
get cray!
At this point in his mid-20s, my father had options. He
could 1) clean shit up so the cat didn’t have access to plastic bags 2) accidentally
“lose” the cat under mysterious circumstances, or 3) enact revenge in a more
subtle manner. Of course he went with that last one, because humans are pretty
simple animals. By all accounts my father collected a handful of plastic bags,
waited around the house until the cat decided to nap (which, let’s be honest,
is approximately 15 hours a day), and snuck up on her. I have a very clear
mental image of him poised over that sleeping cat, preparing to rustle the bags
in her face and disturb her napping.
Aha! That’ll teach her! Except no. That’s not how animals
work.
Goddamn I wish that was how animals worked. At this moment I
would be snuffling, scratching and whining at the terriers’ crate door. Because
obviously if I obnoxiously intrude on their space they’ll understand that I
need mine. Right? Fuck.
As I write this both dogs are innocently sleeping and making
me feel like a real asshole. So I will end this post with how Andrea Gibson feels about dogs.
Trust me, it’s a lot better than I feel at this point.
I love you creeps, and don’t forget it.
-b
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