I don't think I have ever told the story of our pet rat, so here goes:
When I was in college and living in a dorm, spring break came along. I was packing, waiting for my mom to arrive from the Chicago area to pick me up and take me home to Oak Park for the week. As it happened, I was one of the last girls to leave that day, and the Dorm Director--a matronly lady-- came to my room to check on my departure schedule. She was carrying a shoe box with holes in it. "Someone left this cute little hamster in the laundry room," she said. "I don't know what to do with it." The "cute little hamster" was trying to chew his way out of the box, quickly making his air holes into port holes of escape. I told her that my mom and little brother were coming to get me, and since brother Doug had always had hamsters and guinea pigs and gerbils, I would take the "cute little hamster" home with us. She was relieved and grateful. After she left my room, I peered into one of those holes. The nose that greeted me was not the nose of a cute little hamster. It was too pointy and too big. It was a rat. A lab rat, to be exact. An albino lab rat...white with red eyes...and all too intent on getting out of that box. Someone at ISU had unintentionally--or even deliberately--left behind a science department participant. And the Covills gained a pet.
When Mom and Doug arrived, we loaded my stuff in the car. Doug was in the back seat. I handed him the box with holes and told him, not all that quietly, to keep the contents secret until we got out of town. Of course, Mom was immediately suspicious. "What is it??" Never a good liar, I confessed. Told her the story. Know what? She wasn't flapped at all! The rat entertained my 8-year-old brother all the way back to Chicago, and all was well. (Secretly, I knew my mother wouldn't mind. We already had cages and water bottles, etc., at home. The rat would just become the newest resident of one of them. We always did take in stray critters...and even some stray people!) That stupid rat went on to be a great pet. He eventually developed a tumor in his abdomen and went the way of all pets over the Rainbow Bridge, but my brother loved him, as he did all animals.
With that as background, I have to say that I, too, love animals. As mankind continues to dominate the planet, I abhor that critters suffer from habitat disruption, deliberate abuse, inadvertent neglect, and wanton massacre. Yet, I'm not into PETA. I'm still a carnivore. I trust (perhaps errantly) that animals raised for food are slaughtered humanely. I want wild animals to remain in the wild. That cute little raccoon can tear up your house in mere minutes...seriously. I don't mess with wild animals except to rescue the injured ones. (More about that later.) But animals that are bred to be pets need to be treated as pets. In my home as a child and as a woman, the household pets were part of the family. They had full reign of the house without restriction. I always have considered the expenses incurred as collateral damage. I think the expression is "Love me; love my dog." Animal hair, potty mistakes, grooming expenses, vet expenses, food costs, flea control, furniture damage, etc., all translate into the risks of pet ownership. I didn't always like it very much, but I rolled with it as part of having a "needy" family member, but I'm not whacko about it.
The pet loves of my life as a child and a young married woman were dogs. We had a cocker spaniel when I was a kid. She was largely ignored but was never a problem. I have guilt feelings over Taffy because I was just a kid and didn't really understand that dogs weren't supposed to just lay there all day. We fed her and let her out to do her business, but we really didn't do anything to entertain her. Then, as a young woman in my 20s and on my own, my boyfriend-now-ex-husband gave me his Irish Setter, Ann. With him, she was an outside dog. In my home, she was an inside dog...and I loved her as I would have loved a child. She came with pedigree papers but was not a beautiful setter. She didn't have a long, silky coat and did have a boxy-looking face...and the brains had been bred out of her. She wasn't very sharp. But she was totally reliable after an adjustment period. We could take her anywhere without a leash. She would stay close to us, even with other dogs around. She was my baby...and then she died a horrible death in a hot car on a warm day. (I won't go into more detail in order to protect the feelings of the person responsible.) After she died, I was sick to my stomach for weeks. Then along came my daughter.
Funny how having a baby makes worrying about furry family a little less significant. We lived in rental houses, most of which didn't allow pets....but, in time, my kid wanted a cat. She LOVED cats. We took one in for awhile in Pontiac, IL, against our lease, but got rid of it when the landlord saw it in a window while driving by. When we moved to Indiana in 1988, Meg was on a mission for a cat. We asked for, and got, permission from the landlord to have one. I called a vet's office which put me in touch with a lady in Eminence, IN, who took in strays. She fed a lot of felines, almost feral, in her back yard and in her house. The one we got from her was the only one she could catch that day--a yellow tabby that we named Butterscotch. Butterscotch raked the dickens out of my arm when we tried to put her in the carrier, and when we opened the carrier at home, she ran out and disappeared under the furniture, not to be seen again for awhile.
The very next day, a kitten came running at me out of the bushes in the back yard, meowing and needy. It was dirty, but mostly hungry. Immediately, Meg wanted to keep it. I said no. We didn't need two cats. I sent her out in the neighborhood with it to ask neighbors if the kitten--probably about 4-months-old--was theirs. She came back saying no one claimed it. (I have absolutely no proof that she actually did as I asked, but it doesn't matter now.) The kitten-cat, that we soon named Puddy Tat, ate and ate and ate...then slept forever. And yes, it stayed with us. What else was I to do with it?
Puddy Tat was largely responsible for bringing Butterscotch out of her shell. We put strings down to play with the Puddy. Butter, just out of reach under the couch, couldn't resist the temptation to grab at the strings, too. Eventually, Butter began to come out and trust us, but she would always be our scaredy-cat, ready to run at the slightest noise or movement. Puddy, however, became a cat thug of sorts. We saw her terrorize visiting dogs ten times her size, and if she saw another cat outside the house in HER territory, her tail puffed up and she became loud and wildly aggressive--even bit my daughter once--until the threat of the other cat disappeared. Still, she and Butterscotch were the best of friends. They licked each other endlessly and could often be found wrapped up in each others' arms, asleep.
Then the divorce happened. People don't think of who will get custody of the critters in a divorce situation. There was no doubt in our case. My ex insisted that the cats would have to go with my daughter and I (which sounds unselfish but wasn't). The problem was that Meg and I were moving into a rented duplex in another town with a lease that stipulated "no pets". Drat! We kept them with us for a short time until we could figure out how to re-home them, but it wasn't happening. Meg finally expressed what I was already thinking: we're going to get caught with the cats and will be kicked out of this place with nowhere else to go.
I called Brother Doug, the animal lover. Doug was a grown-up man by now, living in an apartment in a western suburb of Chicago with a roommate and six cats of his own (against his lease). Would he take our cats and find homes for them? He assured me he would/could, so Meg and I drove up to the 'burbs to deliver our furry buddies, hoping they would find happy new homes. Doug didn't incorporate them into his cat population. He kept the two newcomers isolated in his bedroom. (I can only imagine what life was like for them in there. Puddy loved to wake me up early every morning by standing on the pillow just above my head and licking my hair. Oh, boy!)
A few months later, I began to think about buying a house in Plainfield, IN, where we were living. The gal that owned the duplex we rented was also a real estate agent, so I called her and asked if she were willing to help me find someplace that I could afford and also allow me to break my lease. She was. She took us to see some little "national homes" in the neighborhood where I now live. She guided me through the whole process of making an offer and getting a loan. She said, "Peg, this is the only house you will ever need." (She was right. It has served me well for almost 25 years.) A couple of days after we moved in, during spring break, I called my brother--seven months after taking my cats--to find that he still had them. I told him we could take them back. He replied that we needed to do it NOW because he was preparing for a visit from the Health Department. Someone had turned him in for having too many cats. Meg and I made the drive and came back with our long-lost buddies.
We wondered if the cats would remember us and what challenges the new surroundings would bring. Interestingly, none at all! When we opened the carrier in the new place, the felines waltzed out and looked around as if to say, "What took you so long?" They didn't act suspicious or scared in the least. We introduced them to the litter box and the food area, and that was all it took. They were home. We were all family again. Back to business as usual.
Years passed. First Butter went over the Rainbow Bridge...then Puddy a couple of years later. (Puddy never really recovered from losing her cat buddy and her human buddy--who got married and moved out--all in the same week.) But there was another critter that came into my life that overlapped Puddy's demise: Frodo the Wonderdog.
Frodo was an adorable little female buff cocker spaniel puppy that my then-son-in-law just had to have. They were barely ensconced in an apartment on the west side of Indy. I begged them not to take on a puppy, but Nathan was adamant. The instant they got married, they got Frodo. The pup was a hoot! Cute as she could be! But, because the kids lived in an area that had a lot of ducks and geese as outside residents, they didn't take her out to housebreak her because of all of the goose poop on the ground. Shortly thereafter, they moved to the country to a house on a golf course and had babies. Housebreaking Frodo took even more of a back seat to raising children. In time, it pained me to see my toddler-granddaughter learn to put a napkin or piece of paper towel over dog poop in the house so no one would step on it. Ugh! That dog loved me. When I showed up to visit, she would run figure-eights all over the house in excitement. Wow!
Then, inevitably, the family had to move on to a higher paying job to support the family. Nathan took a job in Muncie, IN, but they were moving into a rental home that said--you guessed it--no pets. What to do with Frodo? By now, the Fro-Dog was three years old, still largely unhousebroken, and neurotic. She wouldn't eat dog food but was a shameless food whore. She would take food off the table if your back was turned, and heaven help you if you had food in your hand without paying attention. She got upset if the table was cleared without her being allowed to lick the plates. If she got something she knew she wasn't supposed to have, she ran to a back room and would snarl horribly if you tried to take it away from her. She also was a "fear biter". In short, she had been treated like a princess and couldn't understand life in the real dog world. I loved her but I didn't want her. Still, guess where she went?? Grandma's house, of course. I made Meg and Nate pay to get her up-to-date with shots and things that she would need with me....money they really couldn't afford (still ashamed of myself over that one)...and became the tentative owner of a granddog.
Tentative, you ask? I had every intention of finding another home for Frodo. I figured I'd keep her for a bit, spend the summer housebreaking her in an effort to make her a more adoptable pet. (Part of that was teaching her how to ride in the car. She hated it. Insisted on being under the driver's feet, which is unsafe. It took three or four trips of having to pull over to eject her from the front to the back, then holding my arm over her escape area to come back to the front. She never did get used to it. Finally learned to sleep on the floor of the back seat, but only after I picked her butt up to put her there. Ugh!) Her spoiled little furry brain thought she was human. I was trying to teach her how to be a dog!
One day, my daughter and grandchildren came to visit me for my birthday and never went home. (Long story.) A divorce ensued. The dog became a problem. STILL not housebroken, Frodo sometimes would hit the puppy training pads that I had spread over the kitchen's indoor/outdoor carpeting. Sometimes she wouldn't. I couldn't keep the floor clean enough to raise young children. Little Ryan thought it was funny to get down on his hands and knees and follow Frodo around the house wherever she went. She would come to hide under my legs, but he was relentless. I was just waiting for her to turn and bite him in the face. Then, too, she nipped Robin on the fingers more than once for reasons that Robin was too young to understand. (It hurt enough to make her cry.) I couldn't let the children go outside in the backyard without first doing "poop patrol" to pick up piles of dog feces. Ryan got pretty astute at finding them...and it bothered me. The dog had to be groomed about every three months. Any less than that, and the hair around her rectum would catch feces and bring it into the house. Her ears would get infected and stink. No one really played with her...and I confess that I was busy trying to maintain my career, keep house, help my daughter stay in school with all her stresses, and provide for my grandchildren. The poor dog--stubborn as she was--probably suffered, and so did I. I gave up.
I could have given Frodo up to a shelter, but she would not have understood even a second of that. She also was not a candidate for immediate adoption due to the fact that she wasn't housebroken, her fear biting, and her defensive attitude about toys and treats. She would not have survived as an "outside" dog. I talked to Meg, briefly, about the situation and found that she did not care for the dog at all, aside from the obvious. I decided to have the Frodog euthanized. I felt like an absolute murderer. No one at the vet's office discouraged me. I think they also felt that Frodo wasn't going to work in any other home. And so it was. My decision. Frodo was eight when I sent her over the Rainbow Bridge. I had loved her and provided for her and tried to train her for five years, but there came a time when I had to weigh the pros and cons of having her. She lost, God bless her. I will forever live with the understanding that I failed a pet. Actually, she was failed before I got her, but all of my efforts to rehabilitate her didn't work. For the first time in my life, I gave up on a critter. It hurt. Still, our lives were better for her not being with us anymore. I'm sure the grandchildren have secret accusations in their hearts about my doing that to "their" dog...but when they are parents and have to think about their own children crawling around on floors that are soaked in urine and feces, they may understand. I hope so.
I have been petless ever since. Because I live alone and get lonely sometimes, people--especially my daughter--say "You need a pet." Blah! No, I don't! I'm done being the Pet Mommy. I've made my sacrifices at that altar. Through many years of pet ownership, I have endured cat poop, dog poop, cat barf--hair balls and otherwise--animal hair all over the house, potty accidents, shredded wallpaper from bored cats, vet bills, figuring out who will care for them in my absence, costs for pet food, cat litter, pet grooming and pet toys, arranging the house to make sure food is protected, parasite control. I'm done! If I had a life partner that guaranteed another person in the house, I'd love to rescue a cat, for instance, but then I am immediately tethered to the critter when I want to go visit my daughter. As it is, I'm free, and I intend to keep it that way.
I don't want a pet because I don't want to be limited to life's choices with one as a responsibility. Pets are our retarded children, totally dependent yet unable to communicate above a certain level. I can no longer afford to feed and vet one. I don't have the resources to replace things they destroy. I don't have the resources to provide needed grooming. I can't exercise a dog. I can't play with a cat. Bottom line, I don't need a single other life to be responsible for since I can barely be responsible for my own! I guess at my age, alone and relatively infirm, interacting with a pet is like interacting with a grandchild: love 'em and spoil 'em, then send them back to their owners!