A few months ago I went and broke my only rule.
Born of heartache and well-intentioned misdeed, this rule had served me well over the years. It was especially designed to minimize frustration, expense, inconvenience and eventual heartbreak. This rule had saved many lives . . . many innocent lives . . .
Only one rule . . . one lousy simple rule. And I broke it.
RULE #1: NO PETS
It all started with a simple, sweet request from my
beautiful daughter. “Dad? May I show you something? It will only take a minute . . .”
This “something” turned out to be several pictures and
two videos of a little Chihuahua/Jack Russell mix named Popcorn. Before I could say anything my wife appeared
out of nowhere to stand by my daughter’s side; a silent and foreboding
apparition reminiscent of the Ghost of Christmas Future . . . Uncharacteristically
silent I should add . . .
My blood ran cold.
Before I could muster a defense they cut off my flank
with incisive precision, reinforcements arriving in the form of my son . . . my
only son . . .
It was three against one and not just any three; my wife silent
as the grave; my son willing to trade his inheritance for the mere pittance of
approval from his mom and sister; and my daughter whose big blue eyes begged me
not to fail her yet again.
“W-w-w-well,” I stuttered. “Who’s going to take care of it?”
Weak you stupid
idiot get ahold of yourself man
“Oh I will do everything Dad!” my daughter assured
me. “Feed him, bathe him and play with
him!”
It sounded all too romantic so I decided to throw some
poop in the fan.
“What about the dog crap?
Who’s going to clean that up?”
My daughter looked startled but before she could say a
word my wife placed her hand lovingly on her shoulder, turned to me and said
with finality, “Don’t worry about that I will help you.”
“W-w-w-well,” the stutter returned, “Isn’t this going to
be expensive? Can we afford a pet?” My wife just smiled at me pityingly. I had forgotten what a big heart she has and
how generous she is with my money.
“No, honey, it won’t be expensive,” she assured me. “Just $40 for shots and some dog food. He doesn’t look like he could eat too much.”
So in the end love and generosity prevailed over cold logical
reason. Promises were made, commitments
were forged and blood oaths were signed.
The kids wanted to name the dog JoJo which was fine by me
as Jo is a family name. And after
witnessing the dog’s penchant for big black females ten times his size and his
napoleon-like demeanor I tagged on the surname Bruce because he seemed so princely
in a medieval Gaelic sort of way. And yes I realize that makes absolutely no
sense . . .
Good bye Popcorn . . . Hello JoJo the Bruce . . .
And now after approximately $800 in expenditures (shots,
license, neutering, medicine, doggy obedience school, sweaters, leashes,
collars, play toys, blankets, bedding, costumes, inside kennel, outside
doghouse, doggy treats and a year’s supply of food) and weeks and weeks of
potty training he has become part of the family.
The chores have been divided up as fairly as possible
with my wife doing most of the work while I take care of the poop and pay for
stuff. And the kids play with him
sometimes.
Reflecting on all of this leaves me feeling lost and
deserted. I think I need a new rule.
2 comments:
You're in luck! Dogs are a great comfort for when you're feeling lost and deserted so I guess it all works out!
Loved this post! Oh, the triple-threat... Makes me wonder what my dad feels like after our Mother-Daughters joint offensives. Haha! All I can say is: You did the right thing, Tim. ;)
-Ally
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