A Conversation About Babies
"Now there are real babies around," says Ailz. "I can see that my pets are simply baby substitutes."
"That's a woman thing," I say. "Women must have something in their brains that makes them respond to small helpless creatures. I know I don't have it."
"The need to have something totally dependent on you," she says.
"For me," I say, "babies are just potential human beings. I value them for what they're going to become. The sooner they're out of the drooling, up-chucking, helpless stage the better."
"I suspect the babies feel that way too," says Ailz.
"That's a woman thing," I say. "Women must have something in their brains that makes them respond to small helpless creatures. I know I don't have it."
"The need to have something totally dependent on you," she says.
"For me," I say, "babies are just potential human beings. I value them for what they're going to become. The sooner they're out of the drooling, up-chucking, helpless stage the better."
"I suspect the babies feel that way too," says Ailz.
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I know. They are exceptions to the 'rule'. And they do have perfectly competent female partners.
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I'm "good" with babies and small children, but I'm not drawn to them. I wouldn't care if I never dandled another one again.
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My husband, on the other hand (and my son, actually), LOVES babies.
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My cats fill the 'house is a home' companion niche.
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Drat!
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Pets are definitely child-substitutes.
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Not that a cat is a small, helpless creature and I don't actually like tiny babies at all, so perhaps a cat fills the toddler/small child niche rather than the helpless baby? :)
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However, I'm not convinced it's an absolutely male/female "thing" -- I even found my own baby's helplessness oppressive.
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My pets are definitely *not* child substitutes. Having just taken one to be put down on Monday and being more or less over it, I can say that with some confidence. Even *contemplating* the possibility of the death of my son, on the other hand, makes me want to reach for the sedatives.
I just like having other life forms around the house, although after vacuuming two canisters of cat hair out of my home office I think I might be able to make do with the backyard birds when our other pets pass into the Great Beyond.
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But that's what they are- other life forms- unknowable and alien.
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I have to say that I do not really miss my daughter's infancy at all.
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Of course, I think of *them* as my babies, to some extent. They *are* genuinely dependent on me, emotionally as well as physically.
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are the ones that are used to living in herds, packs or flocks.
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I like them when they're about three and up. I love their potential. I love their limitless worlds when they're between that magical age of 3 and 7.
My boyfriend and I have this conversation all the time. He says "women cute/miniature things what the hell yadda yadda" and then I laugh when he succumbs to it. :)
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I'm quite good with small people- and I think that's precisely because I relate to them as people- and not as fuzzy little packets of cute.
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I suppose I should say the kind of cute, small, and/or fuzzy I fall for is mostly all the animal kingdom except humans, heh.
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(Anonymous) 2009-04-08 03:59 pm (UTC)(link)Tom F
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It must be a bit of an anxious time for the two of you
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(Anonymous) 2009-04-09 07:27 am (UTC)(link)no subject
I can vaguely remember what it was like to be an expectant father for the first time. Most everything else faded into insignificance.
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Cats, on the other hand, are natural loners who do not really need me for anything other than to fill the food and water dishes and empty the litter box. They are very low maintenance. They also show genuine affection, and bond well usually with a single member of the family, while they either ignore or act in an offhandedly friendly manner to the other people. Unlike dogs, cats NEVER try to be human. They are smart enough to know that they will get fed without doing tricks. They don't make much noise, either.
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