Vale, Rocky!

This is a bit of a tie-in with the previous post.
One of the many parenting decisions about which I harbor some doubt, once in a while, is the whole matter of pets, most particularly, a dog.
I have a very vivid memory of my late father, while watching my oldest (now 38) play with one of their neighbor’s dogs, meditatively saying, “What that boy needs is a dog.”
Half accusingly, I felt at the time.
But then, what grounds did he have to criticize? We had never owned a pet, except for that one goldfish when I was three that eventually leapt to its death. Yes, we had reason: my mother had severe respiratory issues, including allergies to all animal and bird dander. I’d inherited some of that: fairly severe for cats, not so severe, but still present, for dogs. It still hurt, though, because for some tragic reason, I was enamored of cats, so much so that at one point they got me a subscription to Cat Fancy magazine. Did that make it better or worse? I don’t know. All I know is that I would have given anything to have a cat, including a lung or two.
So, raising my own kids, never did I seriously consider getting a dog or cat for my own. I definitely couldn’t handle a cat, and dogs were iffy. I had survived, my yearning unfulfilled, so could they.
Not that it didn’t come up. Frequently, both directly and indirectly, passive-aggressively, in my mind. As it turned out, conveniently or sadly, Kid #4 (now 20) had the honor of inheriting The Allergies. Oddly enough, the only one of the five. Cats hit him hard, dogs less so, but enough to be a powerful counterargument when it came up.
I had other arguments, of course – and still do, and don’t hesitate to wield them. I’ve never had a dog and don’t know what to do with them. I don’t want to have to take care of one. I don’t want to have to think about what to do with it when I travel. I for sure don’t want to spend thousands of dollars on vet care – which I’ve seen happen to others on more than one occasion.
But, truth be told, I’m also certain that if Mike hadn’t died, well, yeah, we’d have a dog. He really wanted one, and I was fine with it, since it would be his and theirs and not my problem. We’d only lived here a few months when he died and were still in the apartment, starting to look for a house, with the clear understanding – again, no objection from me – that once there was a house and a yard, there’d be a dog, too.
So there’s that. Because he did die, and well, here we have the question of…did I do my best? Everyone came through okay (I think), a dog would probably still have helped. A lot. So maybe I didn’t do my best. Maybe I could have stretched and sacrificed a bit more. And so here we are in that place I was just talking about, aren’t we? I don’t feel guilty – not really – and I don’t regret it, but neither am I going to defend it to the death as the only choice I could have made because I was doing my best. It’s quite possible that the choice to suck it up and get a damn dog might have been the better one for the boys.
Well, what’s done is done, so fast forward to 2014, and there Kid #5 and I are, at a local reptile show. He idly asks me if he could get a snake, and for some bizarre reason, in a fit of insanity, I said sure. I can’t forget the look on his face. And I can’t forget thesubsequent years of half-teasing resentment…He got a snake, but we can’t get a….dog?

Well, all in all, it was fine. We named him Rocky –my idea actually, after a week or so of indecision, I was inspired by the movie we’d recently watched. It seemed to fit. I’ve declared several times since that if you have to have a pet, and you can handle the feeding (frozen or live, Monsieur?), a snake is a decent choice. It can be left for long periods of time, it requires little attention – in fact ball pythons prefer no attention, but is also interesting because it’s, you know, a snake living in your house.
Add it to the list of Things I Only Know Much About Because of My Family: NASCAR, football, film editing, Charleston, South Carolina, public defense practices, Mazda Miatas and Alberto Ginastera, to just skim the surface.
Snakes.
And now, seven years later – and okay this is really weird – exactly seven years to the day after I published the very popular Day I Lost the Snake post – give me a second, because…this is pretty strange…
Ahem….
As I was saying, seven years later, it was time. Rocky’s owner has probably a year or so left at home before he goes off, and was honestly less and less interested in Rocky. Since he started working, he’s also been responsible for Rocky’s expenses – mostly buying rats, and inflation hits everywhere, including the Rat Market – and he’s tired of paying that. Welcome to my world, bud. He also wants a bigger bed in his room, which wouldn’t be possible with the snake habitat in there.

Finally, he muses in retrospect that he probably should have thought more about it and gone for another kind of snake. As indicated by their name, ball pythons react to stimulation by…curling up in a ball, and it takes time to get them to feel comfortable enough to engage (as much as they do engage at all). “He’s a coward!” is his owner’s way of putting it. A (small) boa, he says now, would have been more “fun.”
Well, life is a process.
So, the owner didn’t argue when I started gently suggesting that maybe it was time. But I also didn’t want to mess with the “Wait for a Craigslist or Facebook Marketplace buyer to show up and argue with your price” dance. So I resolved Rocky would be given away, and luckily, as I made that decision, I saw a listing on Craigslist from a small-time reptile dealer who advertised that he would take your unwanted reptiles off your hands. I’m sure he would have paid, but considering I only paid $50.00 for Rocky back in the day, at this point, I didn’t care. Just take him.

Cleaned the habitat and all that was left was the transfer, which happened last Saturday morning, and after a few pleasantries, off he went, sliding around in his nice clean tank in the back seat.
The owner professed not a bit of sadness as the car turned the corner, but of course, since it all involved change and family and growing up, how could I not get a little verklempt, as one does?
People are getting older. They’re moving on, and as they go, they are filling in those gaps, aren’t they. The oldest – whom my father declared to need a dog thirty years ago – still doesn’t have one, but he has a busy life up there in NYC and has had the chance to take care of other people’s dogs, including loading one into an Uber for a trip across the city. My married son has been through a dog, two cats, and is now on another dog, a boon companion for my grandson. My married daughter and her husband painstakingly earned the trust of a neighborhood stray cat, giving great comfort over some very hard Covid-cursed days. The second to youngest? Still in college, about to get an apartment next month, so his mild references to dogs can now be met with a firm, “You have an apartment. You have money. You want a dog? Get one. Be my guest.”
And the youngest? Well, he tried to get me to look at a picture of something the other day.
I think it was a chameleon.

























