I’d like to speak to the manager!!!
Family pets.
We all have them. Most of us grew up with them.
A few people I know had sociopaths for parents and weren’t allowed to love an animal. Not even a hamster.
In my childhood, we had many pets. Pedro is the first pet I can truly remember, although I know he was not the first. He was a tiny, tiny chihuahua. He loved my mother unconditionally. And he would lose his mind when my Aunt Debbie, would tell my little brother to cry. Something she enjoyed doing. He would cry, and Pedro would get mad.
As is with the case of a lot of chihuahuas, Pedro could also be mean. If he didn’t like you, he had no use for you. I don’t know that he ever bit anyone, but he certainly tried.
The first real tragedy of my childhood, was sitting on the front steps of my house in Paynes Depot, Kentucky and watching a car squish our little 5-pound Pedro. My Aunt pulled him from the road, and I stood next to her watching him die.
Now you might ask, why was little Pedro in the road, well I wish I could tell you. But I can’t. I do know that I cried for several days.
Cindy came next.
I remember this perfectly well.
I yelled at my mother that Pedro was fighting with the dog next door. He belonged to my aunt and uncle. What I didn’t realize till later was that they weren’t fighting. My mom tossed water on them to “break” it up.
We got puppies for Thanksgiving.
We got Cindy. My Aunt Doo got Toji, and I’m not sure what happened to the others.
Cindy was special. She loved us all, but once again, was attached to my mom. She lived until she was 17 or so. She was euthanized while I was at college, and my parents didn’t tell me until I came home for Christmas. Of course, by that time, she was mostly blind, had no teeth, and had long stopped going outside for bathroom breaks.
When I was in sixth grade we got Fiesty. She was Cindy’s puppy and I have no idea who the father was. She was the runt of the litter. Hyper and funny. And sweet as could be. She also lived a nice long life.
That was not true of all of our pets.
When I was in first grade we had a white dog. I don’t remember his name. I’m not even sure he was a he. I don’t remember a lot about him at all.
What I do remember, is that it was summer, and I was spending the day with my stepfather, on the horse farm he worked on.
It was a beautiful day. The sun was shining. The sky was blue. We took his blue VW Beetle up the hill to go to work. When we left, the dog was running around in the field next to our trailer, tied to the fence.
Fast forward about four hours. We take the tractor and wagon, down the hill to the trailer we lived in.
I saw it first. The dog wasn’t running anymore. He was hanging from the fence post. He had jumped over the fence and when he did so, the chain caught on the fence. He’d been strangled to death.
My stepfather, never said a word. We went into the house and had lunch. And when we finished lunch, we went back to the tractor and wagon. I sat there and watched has he unhooked the chain and then tossed the dog on the back of the wagon.
Without speaking, we drove to the back of the 80-acre farm and he tossed the dog onto a rock wall. It was unceremonious. It was not spoken of. He just tossed the dog on the wall and we drove away.
I’ve thought about that day a lot over the years. What I was supposed to to think? Would I do the same thing as an adult.
What I do know is the dog deserved better. I deserved better.
And that’s not even the worst of the pet stories.