RIP Hammy Concannon. Loved pet
Irish Times
The last thing you
think about when buying your first family pet is the day it's
going to die. More common are concerns like `Who is going to end
up looking after it?' or in the case of a rodent, `What happens
if it escapes from its cage?'
I
don't remember the exact moment I promised my daughter a hamster
but I know was feeling sorry for her. She'd been craving a pet
for too long and I had refused everything. We didn't have room
for a dog. Cats scratch. You couldn't hug a goldfish. Rabbits
wreck the garden. By the time we got to hamsters, I'd been broken
down. Weren't they those cute things in The Wind in The
Willows?
At
the pet shop, I realised my mistake. I looked into the cage and,
in my mind, saw a mouse. My daughter tells me I screamed. I know
I didn't because I remember how hard it was not to. I will admit
to silent hand flapping and walking very quickly to the other end
of the shop. From where I'd abandoned her, my daughter looked at
me with big eyes. It was her birthday. I'd promised. That she
didn't say these truths made it worse.
Then I did a
terrible thing. I suggested she might prefer something from the
toyshop next door. She quietly followed me from the pet shop.
Which made me feel terrible. If only she'd argue. In the toyshop,
she went straight to the soft toy section and picked out the
biggest dog she could find. And I couldn't do it. I couldn't let
her settle for something she couldn't feed, talk to or love -
without pretending.
`Let's
go back,' I said.
That's
when we found a particularly hairy hamster that did not resemble
a mouse. He became Hammy Concannon.
We had almost two
`Hammy'-filled years. And though I could never bring myself to
hold him, I did stroke him - whenever I felt under pressure to
prove that I loved him. I was very fond of Hammy, so long as he
was on the other side of the bars. It was not unusual to find me
there, chatting to him when my daughter was asleep or away and I
thought he looked lonely. We had many adventures - including my
personal favourite, Hammymania, which involved SuperHams
(contained in a small box) sliding down a diagonally suspended
rope, James Bond style.
And then one day, he
wasn't the same. He was weak and wouldn't eat or drink. When he
walked, he wobbled. It was Sunday. I promised the vet first thing
next morning. She asked me if he'd die. I said I didn't know.
Because I kind of suspected he might. I think we both did.
In
the morning, afraid to disturb him, we brought him to the vet,
where we learned that he had curled up and gone to sleep. And he
wouldn't be waking up any time soon.
`He
didn't feel any pain,' my seven-year-old son told his older
sister. She hugged me tight. And cried. I thought about how much
she had loved him and how it was her first experience of death.
Then, softie that I am, I was crying too, embarrassing given that
it was probably a first for the vet - a grown woman, crying over
a hamster.
We
took him home. I was surprised when my daughter wanted to bury
him straight away. But she was right. Action was what we needed.
All that digging helped. Hammy was buried with everything he
might need in the `afterlife', including his favourite foods,
even one cereal he didn't like - in case he changed his mind. My
daughter chose a smooth charcoal stone instead of a cross.
`I'm
not religious,' she explained. `And neither was Hammy.'
She
carved an inscription on the stone: RIP. Hammy Concannon. Loved
pet. Then she lit a candle and said good bye. She told him she
loved him. She wasn't crying. But I was a mess. We came inside. I
sat her on my lap, held her. The same brother who told her
that Hammy hadn't felt any pain piped up, `Queen ants live ten times longer
than hamsters.' I shook my head to tip him off that maybe that
wasn't the best conversational tack to take. It was their first
experience of death. I don't think they knew what to say.
I
was surprised then in the days that followed by my daughter words
of wisdom.
`I'd like him to have lived
longer but not in pain.'
`I want to forget him but I
don't.'
`I don't want another hamster.
I want Hammy to be the only one. I wouldn't be able to love
another hamster as much. Maybe I'll get a different pet. But in a
few months.'
When, in the middle of
something, she'd remember he was gone, her eyes would water. I'd
tell her that I'd be her hamster, to squeeze me really tight and
see if she could make me burp. A week later, she drew him. We got
photos of him developed. Where his cage was, is now covered with
cuddly toys. And there is a place on the wall in honour of Hammy
where his picture and photos are displayed. And to think that
we'd have missed all that if we'd left that toyshop with a soft
toy.
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