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Why have pets?
Two dogs, a hamster, nine butterflies, six
river fish, two beetles, and a spider. That's enough.
My 6-year-old thinks not, and my husband's
no help, just sitting there, grinning. It's me who limits the pet
population in this house. And one day, Willow the dachshund played
with Tommy the hamster and reduced the population by one. After
considerable grief, my daughter realized the absence might mean
space for one more pet. A kitten.
I recall our last three cats, pets of my
older children now in college. Smudge regularly raked the couch;
Oliver shredded my favorite sweaters; Orange Juice scaled the
counter for Thanksgiving turkey. For those, and other reasons --
smelly litter, shedding fur, sharp claws -- we now have
short-haired dogs who go outside. However, both of them are
occasionally incontinent. They also bark at anything that moves,
fifty yards away, outside, with the door closed. Willow is
addicted to tennis balls and Daisy the mini greyhound does not
smell like a flower.
My young daughter never knew these dogs as
puppies, and the cats went to pet heaven before she was born.
She's never had an animal she can grow up with and help it learn
to behave. Our aging dogs seem more like aunt and uncle than
malleable pups.
The research says that raising pets
teaches children responsibility, empathy, loyalty. Of course, I
want to help my child develop these important character traits.
But, everybody knows it's Mom who ends up with the clean up. I'm
the one who'll be home with this cat long after the little owner
has left for college. So I'm the one who has to say yes. Even my
pet-loving husband agrees. Anyway, at least I get to decide what
kind of cat we get, and exert some influence over its name. How
about Bug, Brat, Bandit, or Band-aid? All will probably apply.
What kind of cat? We've buried ourselves
in library books about different breeds, and now my child can
recite the characteristics of a dozen varieties. She wants a
Persian. I veto; it must have short hair. A Sphynx? No way, must
have some hair. Siamese? Maybe, they're pretty and loyal, but
loud. I pick an Abyssinian, because it has short hair, a quiet
voice, energy, and affection. She concedes. Okay. Now to find a
kitten. I locate breeders and nearly pass out at the pricetag,
$400 and up. But price should be no issue for a family member.
(Did I say that?)
Before a kitten comes home, we begin
training the little human who's already here. "Cats are
independent, Sweetie; it may not always want to sit on your lap,
or go to bed when you do." And on and on
One Friday night I spot an ad in the
newspaper for Abyssinian kittens. The next afternoon we bring home
a 12-week old, reddish-brownish male we immediately name Cinnamon
Toast. Poor guy is so afraid to be away from his mummy; we take
him to my daughter's room to postpone meeting the two dogs.
However, the dogs have different intentions, and within an hour
Willow introduces himself to the newcomer. Little Toast pops up,
electrified -- fur straight out and sizzling.
A week passes. The dogs live downstairs
and the kitten resides upstairs behind a high fortress gate. Twice
a day my son (home from college) and I bring the three together,
on leashes, so they can smell each other, safely. Daisy and Toast
seem to want peace between kingdoms, but Willow plunges forward, a
four-legged knight bent on battle.
Upstairs, the kitty rules. He dashes from
room to room testing beds, swatting curtains, leaping for ledges,
rolling over for a rub and a cuddle. My daughter adores him. She
brought his picture to school the first day, and today she brought
a 5-inch scratch across her face. The kitty had climbed her to get
to the windowsill.
No cat in your bedroom at night, I say
after that. She cries while I watch the long scratch crinkle along
her cheek. He'll be lonely, she pleads. I hug her, my kitten, the
one I need to protect.
Every day, while my daughter is at school,
I put Willow and Toast in kennels, facing one another. Talk it up
guys, I say. And they do. Then they face each other on leashes to
work some more on their relationship. It may take another week; it
may take a month to get them to withdraw claws and paw a treaty.
They better. My daughter needs to see that pets can learn to get
along, like people. They better.
P. S. Linda Knapp wants to add that caring
for pets can prepare couples for parenthood and help elders avoid
loneliness.
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