My life changed dramatically and forever when I lost TJ.

I welcome you to follow along as I adjust to my "new normal".

It is not all puppies and ice cream but it is my life....real and honest.


Thursday, August 2, 2012

Please Welcome Pamela Hutchins!

Today I have the pleasure of hosting one of my very dear blogging friends. Pamela is a wife, Mother, and most recently an Indie Author. I don't hand my blog over to just anyone, but I know that most of you are animal lovers and wanted to give you a sneak peak into one of her latest books. I had the pleasure of reading Puppalicious and Beyond before it's official release and I truly enjoyed it. If you liked the stories of James Herriot then you will love this book! So, without further ado, I give you Pamela Hutchins.

At Least We’ll Always Be Able To Find It

Petey the one-eyed Boston terrier went under the knife for the snip-snip. You know, neutering. Why, you may rightly ask, would we do this to our sweetie Petey?

Well, when we picked him up from boarding at the super awesome Polka Dot Dogs two weeks before, they said, “Your little darlin’ is trying to become a father and has his one eye on that Chihuahua over there. And the cockapoo. Oh, and also the Maltese.”

Pooooooor Petey. In his defense, he told me all three were super hot little bitches. And he loves Polka Dot Dogs. Instead of kennels, they let all the dogs of similar size and temperament play in open rooms together. He’d like us to take him along wherever we go, but if he can’t go with us, he prefers PDD.

PDD, however, has a policy: At the age of seven months, little boy doggies no longer get to stay in open-room boarding if they can’t keep it to themselves. While I think anyone would be lucky to get the bonus of little Peteys along with the price of their boarding, I guess I can accept this.

So, Petey visited his very intimate buddies at the vet’s office. After three months of eye treatments, they know and love him well. After neutering my poor baby, they know him even better. Before the procedure, they asked me if I’d like them to put a microchip in Petey, in case he ever gets lost. I said yes, but then I remembered that Eric and I had agreed to partner on all parenting decisions, and Petey was our newest child, after all.

I called Eric. “Do we want Petey to have one of those Finder microchip thingies?”

Eric said, “Sounds like a good idea to me.”

Excellent, because I already told them yes,” I confessed. “They said they can put one in when they remove his you-know-whatsies.”

Eric paused. “Wait a second. They remove his you-know-whatsies and put the chip in the space left behind?”

I didn’t ask, but that sounds likely, since this only came up because of his procedure.”
So he’ll have a tracker in his ball sack??”

I wouldn’t have put it quite like that, but, yeah, I guess that’s about right.”
Another pause.

Well, I guess we’ll always be able to find it, then,” Eric said.

Ew. I’m thinking this microchip may tell us a little more than we really wanted. Whatever happened to the right to privacy? What do we do when Petey starts dating? Or, God forbid, gets married? Wouldn’t it be enough of a challenge that he couldn’t father little Peteys without his anxious parents tracking his every move with his beloved? Not to mention the whole one-eye thing. This is a little more intrusive than, say, a GPS tracker in a car, which I’m not above installing in my kids’ vehicles if they deserve it. But a ball sack tracker? Could I do that to him?

As I pondered the horrors, Eric broke into my reverie. “I’m kidding, Pamela. It’s a good idea. It’s fine. I’ll bet they don’t even put it there. I’ll bet they just use the occasion of anesthesia to tuck it in somewhere else.”

Really?”

Really.”

I exhaled. What a relief, because I was pretty sure that wherever they were going to put the microchip, it was a done deal by now.

Later that same day, I picked up our Petester. Oh, what a pitiful sight he was, head hanging, eyes downcast. He seemed awfully low, even for a dog that had lost his manhood. I paid and whisked him to the car, whispering supportive and encouraging words in his ear about his bright future and the long line of female dogs who didn’t give a rat’s ear about puppies, citing to our own and Cowboy as examples of devoted and puppyless partners.

Nothing worked. I just couldn’t cheer him up. We were almost home when a cold dread seeped over me. I pulled to the side of the road and put the car in park. I knew even before I carefully searched his sixteen-pound body for a microchip incision what I would find—nothing.

The only point of entry? Yes, you guessed it: the poochy pouch. Little tears of guilt welled up in the corners of my eyes. I stroked him and begged for his understanding and forgiveness. This appeared to mollify him a bit, and we headed for home.

As I was making dinner that night, Susanne came in. “I guess that surgery didn’t work. Petey’s humping his stuffed German shepherd.”

A few minutes later, Clark swung by. “What a stud, Mom. Petey’s giving it to that kangaroo. Didn’t he just get his balls chopped off today?”

When he walked through the door, Eric exclaimed, “Wow, Petey, you aren’t letting a little pain stop you, are you?”

I could only imagine. As I pondered his actions, even I had to admit it. Our Petey is a total slut. Maybe the vet put the tracker exactly where we need it to be.

By Pamela Fagan Hutchins, who knows better than to share stuff like this on the internet, but she just can’t help herself.

Reprinted from the book Puppalicious and Beyond with permission from SkipJack Publishing, and available on Amazon.com and at other online and live retailers.


12 comments:

  1. LOL, funny story! I think they normally put the chips behind the neck - that's where they scan for them too if a stray dog shows up at the pound.

    We have a cat we had spayed many years ago and she still goes into heat on occasion.

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  2. i'm guessing, by now, petey and his hormones may have settled down. :)

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  3. I LOooooooVE Petey & was quite upset to learn that he lost his balls.

    I over-heard a couple talking about it the other day while I was ordering a Latte....

    By the look of that darling face, I find it hard to believe that he is a slut.

    At least he doen't need to use protection anymore.

    GREAT STORY, Pamela! I so much enjoyed it! <3

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  4. Microchips are injected into the upper back via a needle and there is usually no visible site. I work at a humane society that microchips and sterilizes thousands of animals a year and I assure you they are not placed where testicles once were!

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  5. I actually do know where they put them. Just can't help where the mind goes, and once my husband and I start riffing, it just keeps going and going and going :)

    Hey Sandy, thanks for posting my silliness. Love my dogs, and love you!

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  6. No, Petey isn't a slut! He's a manwhore. Very macho, very manly. I guess he showed you that nothing can keep a good dog down... snicker!!

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  7. Lol! Dogs (and cats) are great fodder for humor. This is hilarious! Thanks for sharing Pam's silliness. xo

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  8. Kinda made me laugh that someone thought you were serious but,,,,,This whole thing makes me laugh. YAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH Petey!

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  9. Awww, Petey, what a boy dog you are! This was very funny and don't we all know where the microchip goes? This is a story and anything can happen in a story, microchips can go awry and dogs can continue humping for the rest of their lives, probably can even make puppies if the author lets them.

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  10. I love your Petey. That tracker cracked me up ! :D

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  11. Fun times! Animal antics are grand and it's for sure a conversation I'd be having with Irishman "they're going to track his balls". :D

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  12. Bwahaha! Ahhh Petey, ever the entertaining "slut".

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