The Kid, The Cat and The Dog

SweetWitch

Green Goddess
Joined
Oct 9, 2005
Posts
20,370
Sounds like the title of a bad Eastwood parody, huh? Well, if Clint Eastwood had been here, he would have been no match for this mother-turned-psycho.

The kitty learned a new trick today. I had been warned this sort of thing could happen, but I scoffed at it. “Not my cat,” I said with a laugh. “He hates the new puppy.”

Of course, it might have been hatred that prompted the cat to pull the stunt. Maybe he was hoping to get the puppy in trouble. It worked, but it also backfired on the cat when I caught him in the act.

It all started when I arrived home after work. For the first time in weeks, the day at the Cube Farm had been relaxed, so I was in a pretty good mood when I left. The minute I walked in the door, I snagged the leash and made a big fuss about taking Lucy, our four-month-old Bichon, for a walk. Lucy danced and barked excitedly, her little tail swishing back and forth like a wicked blade intent upon bodily harm.

We took our usual route, around the corner and down the cul de sac. Lucy loves to crap in John’s yard so, hoping to get the proper outcome of our little walk, we headed there straight away. Apparently, she was feeling constipated. Great.

I kept her outside until my hands began to stiffen and freeze. She still hadn’t urinated, so I had to suppose she had taken care of business on my carpeting—again. With a sigh, I dragged her unwilling carcass back toward the house. She was on the trail of something and was determined to follow her nose to its conclusion. My couch was calling me, though, and I was determined to go in. It’s amazing how much strength five pounds of white fluff can have.

Deciding to take a shortcut through the back yard, I discovered what scent the pup must have picked up. My opinion is that it must have been raccoons, judging from the amount of damage to the contents of our garbage cans. There was a mess of trash all over the yard. Sigh.

Once I got the dog wrestled back into the house, my husband was informed of the mess. He joined me in the back yard for some neighborhood beautification before I finally got the chance to sit down and relax. Yuck, what a mess.

Just as my backside hit the couch, I remembered I needed to get some laundry done or my child would be going to school in her PJ’s in the morning. Dang it! She had just got out of the shower, so there would be no hot water left, but I prefer to wash in cold, so it didn’t matter. Ah, but the dryer was full of my husband’s shirts and the washer was full of the load I did the night before. With a sigh, I took a step back—right into a fresh pile of dog poop. Okay, so the dog’s not constipated after all.

After muttering a string of oaths, I peeled off my knee-high, tossed it in the trash and went in search of my daughter. What I found was a wet bathroom floor. I yelled, told her to clean up the dog crap in the laundry room and wipe up her mess in the bathroom. Like most eight-year-olds, she pondered these instructions until I rolled my eyes heavenward and stomped off.

It was in my bedroom that I discovered my cat’s new trick. Mr. Fuzzball, the world’s longest and most neurotic cat, pushed my husband’s half-gallon sized drinking vessel off the table for the dog to get into. The happy pooch bounced joyously through the puddle of tea and ice, snatching up cubes and tossing them in the air. It was my feral bellow that brought my daughter running. I barked orders, “Get the shampooer, mop up the bathroom and clean up the dog s%$t!”

The poor kid went running for the shampooer, distracted by her father in the front room who demanded to know what was happening. With the enthusiasm only a child possesses, she launched into a fanciful and animated tale of what was going on in the rear of the house while I collected scattered ice cubes. Where was my shampooer?

I found it blocking the hallway, halfway in the closet, right where she had left it. “Shampooer!” I yelled, followed by, “Focus, girl.”

She dragged it in, admonishing her little puppy the entire way. The dog’s tail swished dangerously, her little tongue lolling while she panted happily. The cat watched all this from the safety of the bed, where little Lucy couldn’t harass him. I swear he as grinning malevolently.

Then I walked to the bathroom to fill the shampooer tank. When my bare feet hit the wet floor, I almost went down. I jumped back from the room, was just preparing to yell at the kid when I saw the dog peeing on the carpet, not two feet from where I stood.

I was drawing perilously close to the edge. There was a crash in the back of the house as I scooped the little pee bag up and deposited her on the piddle pad. I counted to ten. I did a quick yoga breathing exercise. I cursed vehemently.

Releasing the mutt, I went in search of the latest disaster. With a glance through the bathroom door, I found my child hurriedly sopping up the mess in front of the bathroom entrance with one of my guest towels.

Breathe. Roll eyes. Find new mess.

Mr. Fuzzball was nowhere to be found, but the lovely urn my aunt had given me was in about twelve pieces. I’m beginning to hate the cat.

Hands on hips, head hanging down, breathe.

With that mess disposed of, I tried to remember what I was to do next. I heard a bellow from my husband in the direction of the laundry room. Oh yeah. Dog messes.

I barked more orders, demanding, for the fourth time, that my daughter clean up the dog poop and urine. She was watching TV. The set was switched off. She opened her mouth to protest, but something in my expression silenced her. Maybe it was looking into the desperate eyes of a woman on the edge, or maybe she could feel the spanking that was headed her way. In any case, she jumped up in search of toilet paper to clean up her puppy’s mess and was staying well-clear of my reach.

Deep breath. What was I doing? Oh, shampooer.

I found the tank in the hall where I left it and headed for the bathroom. The entrance was dry, but the rest of the floor was covered in pools of water. What the hell? The rug was soaked. There were several towels lying about and the tub was full of toys, wet washcloths and various bottles of hair care products.

The shriek I let loose bordered on that of a woman possessed. “How many times to I have to tell you to close the shower curtain? Have you lost your mind? No wonder the water bill is so high. Get in here and clean up...”

The tirade lasted several minutes until I started to hear my mother’s voice coming out of my mouth. Stop, breathe, picture a peaceful place.

The dog was howling, the cat was yowling, the kid was cowering and the husband was hiding in the garage. With the tank finally filled, I managed to get the tea cleaned up. I went over and over the spot, but it had set too long and there’s a permanent dark stain on my once-cream colored carpet.

As I was putting the machine away, I stepped on another ice cube. The resulting surprise caused me to bite my tongue.

Whiskey, I decided. Lots and lots of whiskey. After finding my husband in the garage (his hands in the air as if to ward off an attack) I asked him to kindly go supervise the daughter while I took a breath. He started to mumble something he hoped would be supportive, but a glance from my fuming eyes stopped him short.

“Sure, hon,” he said as he carefully squeezed between me and the car.

With a beaker of whiskey and a splash of Coke, I finally got to sit down. I’d been home almost two hours by then, but the laundry was going, Lucy was confined to her crate, Mr. Fuzzball’s eyes could be seen peeping from behind the couch and the husband had explained to our child she needed to remain absolutely silent for a little while. Then he disappeared into his man-cave.

Soothing jazz in my ears, house quiet, second mug of booze—I think my family might just survive—but the jury’s still out.
 
Remind me never to have children or pets...um...wait a minute...I already have...and they're both gone! Hahahaha! :D

My sincere condolences on your hellish evening, Molly. :kiss: Altho it does make for some funny reading. You're the 21st Century Irma Bombeck...but more edgy.
 
Remind me never to have children or pets...um...wait a minute...I already have...and they're both gone! Hahahaha! :D

My sincere condolences on your hellish evening, Molly. :kiss: Altho it does make for some funny reading. You're the 21st Century Irma Bombeck...but more edgy.

I need more whiskey.
 
My fine day was just topped off by one gut-rippingly hilarious visual of Molly on the crest of household insanity! *giggling uncontrollably*

Oooh gawd…please don’t throw a shoe at me now! If it helps, I’m having a scotch whiskey in honor of your stay from unraveling.

May the eve of your tomorrow be better.
 
My fine day was just topped off by one gut-rippingly hilarious visual of Molly on the crest of household insanity! *giggling uncontrollably*

Oooh gawd…please don’t throw a shoe at me now! If it helps, I’m having a scotch whiskey in honor of your stay from unraveling.

May the eve of your tomorrow be better.

You're a lot of help. :rolleyes:

Books, Tom. Memoir books are hot right now. At least that's what they said at La Jolla.

My memoirs would read like a bad adventure novel complete with pedestrian one-liners and a heroine who has turned to drink as her salvation. Wonder if Angelina would play that roll...
 
Another slice of "Life with Molly"; maybe a plot bunny for a domestic comedy ?
Molly, the way you write them is incomparable.
 
Wow, what a day! You have my sympathy.

One of our cats is like that--she can't see a glass with a drink and ice in it without either drinking out of it if it's full enough, or tumping it off onto the floor so she can lick it up. In fact, she likes tumping things over in general, or putting them off tables.
 
Wow, what a day! You have my sympathy.

One of our cats is like that--she can't see a glass with a drink and ice in it without either drinking out of it if it's full enough, or tumping it off onto the floor so she can lick it up. In fact, she likes tumping things over in general, or putting them off tables.

Mr. Fuzzball was being coniving. He's been trying to get the pup into trouble since we brought her home. Today's game was to open a kitchen cabinet for the pup to get into. I caught them both. The cat hissed at me and the dog looked up with innocent brown eyes. Mr. Fuzzball's been in a mood since the scolding and won't talk to me now.

Yesterday, we had a little accident. Little Lucy was insane as usual after her bath. She likes to roll her wet fur over everything with great enthusiasm to dry off. This time she went flying backwards off the couch, struck her head on the steel leg of the coffee table and opened a gash on her noggin. It didn't take long for her white fur to turn crimson. What a mess.

I wanted to render first aid, but no one could catch her. I don't think she noticed the injury. She was stuck in the "puppy buzz", runnign about like a fool and barking joyously.

Finally caught her, cleaned her up and put some boo-boo medicine on it. She didn't like that much.
 
Wow! Sounds exciting.

And makes me wonder about something. Once I caught Doc (my little black cat) raiding the garbage and throwing stuff down for Ziba (the red cat) who isn't the jumper he is. He doesn't even particularly like her. Now I'm rethinking his motivation.
 
Mr. Fuzzball was being coniving. He's been trying to get the pup into trouble since we brought her home. Today's game was to open a kitchen cabinet for the pup to get into. I caught them both. The cat hissed at me and the dog looked up with innocent brown eyes. Mr. Fuzzball's been in a mood since the scolding and won't talk to me now.

Yesterday, we had a little accident. Little Lucy was insane as usual after her bath. She likes to roll her wet fur over everything with great enthusiasm to dry off. This time she went flying backwards off the couch, struck her head on the steel leg of the coffee table and opened a gash on her noggin. It didn't take long for her white fur to turn crimson. What a mess.

I wanted to render first aid, but no one could catch her. I don't think she noticed the injury. She was stuck in the "puppy buzz", runnign about like a fool and barking joyously.

Finally caught her, cleaned her up and put some boo-boo medicine on it. She didn't like that much.

We always put dogs into their travel boxes that are well padded with dry towels after a bath. Learned that 'necessity' after the beagle got away and rolled around in the dirt, all wet, after I'd just finished bathing him. He was really disgruntled when I plopped his butt back in the tub and did it again! :D
 
We are seriously unhappy with our cats at the moment. Remember, we took in a stray at the beginning of the year, and she turned out to be pregnant. We ended up keeping two of the kittens because dd talked her daddy into keeping the one she fell in love with. Well... said kitten has decided she will not use the litter box and pees and poops wherever she feels like it. The stupid little thing peed on my bed the other night. She has no idea how close she is to having her furry little butt kicked out of the house. I am so sick of it all.

Momma cat is not happy in the house. She is always trying to escape when we go outside. We are thinking of just letting her go, even though it will upset one of the boys who has claimed her as his own.

My kitten is the only one of the three that we don't have any problems with.
 
We are seriously unhappy with our cats at the moment. Remember, we took in a stray at the beginning of the year, and she turned out to be pregnant. We ended up keeping two of the kittens because dd talked her daddy into keeping the one she fell in love with. Well... said kitten has decided she will not use the litter box and pees and poops wherever she feels like it. The stupid little thing peed on my bed the other night. She has no idea how close she is to having her furry little butt kicked out of the house. I am so sick of it all.

Momma cat is not happy in the house. She is always trying to escape when we go outside. We are thinking of just letting her go, even though it will upset one of the boys who has claimed her as his own.

My kitten is the only one of the three that we don't have any problems with.

Well, then, that's the one you keep. If it lets everyone pet it and sits on any available lap, the kid will love it soon.
 
Wow! Sounds exciting.

And makes me wonder about something. Once I caught Doc (my little black cat) raiding the garbage and throwing stuff down for Ziba (the red cat) who isn't the jumper he is. He doesn't even particularly like her. Now I'm rethinking his motivation.

I tell you, he's conspiring to get rid of her.

We always put dogs into their travel boxes that are well padded with dry towels after a bath. Learned that 'necessity' after the beagle got away and rolled around in the dirt, all wet, after I'd just finished bathing him. He was really disgruntled when I plopped his butt back in the tub and did it again! :D

One good thing about a Bichon is that there's no wet dog smell, so she can stay in the house. She's fun to watch while she's drying herself. :D

We are seriously unhappy with our cats at the moment. Remember, we took in a stray at the beginning of the year, and she turned out to be pregnant. We ended up keeping two of the kittens because dd talked her daddy into keeping the one she fell in love with. Well... said kitten has decided she will not use the litter box and pees and poops wherever she feels like it. The stupid little thing peed on my bed the other night. She has no idea how close she is to having her furry little butt kicked out of the house. I am so sick of it all.

Momma cat is not happy in the house. She is always trying to escape when we go outside. We are thinking of just letting her go, even though it will upset one of the boys who has claimed her as his own.

My kitten is the only one of the three that we don't have any problems with.

Try a separate litter box for the pee-bucket in a place just for her. Every time she gets ready to go, carry her in and place her in the box. If that doesn't work, find a farmer that needs a good barn cat.

Your local Animal Protective League will help you get the mama cat spaid. They may even take her off your hands and put her in a good home that tolerates such cats. Or, once she's spaid, let her be an outside cat. If she knows that you'll have food for her, she'll stay close to home.

That's what I'd do, anyway.
 
Ziba's our problem cat. She's ruined the carpeting in part of the house, and she habitually pees in the foyer. Theoretically we could return her to the no-kill shelter where we got her--in fact, I believe it's in the contract we signed with them that if we decided she wasn't working out, we would do that. But the first time we took her to the vet for her physical, shortly after we'd gotten her, the vet said, "This cat has no undercoat." She had been under too much stress at the shelter, because there were about 30 cats in it. Under our care, she developed a nice plushy coat. But she wants to be the only cat, and expresses her displeasure at having either Doc or Il Grigio around by peeing in the wrong place. I'm just glad she poops in the box, and she's been known to do that just outside the box, if she thinks the level of litter is unacceptably low. As for being the Only Cat, this ain't happening--if anyone goes, it's going to be her. But she's so stupid and trusting of us, I don't want to return her to the Sartre-esque hell of the shelter.

I'd like to get rid of the carpet, and stain the concrete floor. Then it would at least be no harder to clean than the foyer is. :<
 
Ziba's our problem cat. She's ruined the carpeting in part of the house, and she habitually pees in the foyer. Theoretically we could return her to the no-kill shelter where we got her--in fact, I believe it's in the contract we signed with them that if we decided she wasn't working out, we would do that. But the first time we took her to the vet for her physical, shortly after we'd gotten her, the vet said, "This cat has no undercoat." She had been under too much stress at the shelter, because there were about 30 cats in it. Under our care, she developed a nice plushy coat. But she wants to be the only cat, and expresses her displeasure at having either Doc or Il Grigio around by peeing in the wrong place. I'm just glad she poops in the box, and she's been known to do that just outside the box, if she thinks the level of litter is unacceptably low. As for being the Only Cat, this ain't happening--if anyone goes, it's going to be her. But she's so stupid and trusting of us, I don't want to return her to the Sartre-esque hell of the shelter.

I'd like to get rid of the carpet, and stain the concrete floor. Then it would at least be no harder to clean than the foyer is. :<

Have you tried disposable piddle pads? Might be worth a try.
 
My sympathies to you with your trials with your pets and child.

I've got pets and parents. My dad is 81 years old, 95% deaf, refuses to wear a hearing aid, and is starting to become very forgetful. I've got 2 dogs and my dad loves to toss food to them on the floor. He did this in his old house all the time, but in my house the kitchen is carpeted (not my choice, the people who owned it before me did it). It doesn't matter what it is, bread, french fries, pizza crust, cheese, fruit. I've pleaded with my dad, screamed, yelled, threatened, but he keeps on doing it and each time he says he "accidentally dropped it", you don't accidentally drop big chunks of food every meal every day. So I've got 2 overweight dogs and a very stained kitchen carpet.

For the most part my dogs are pretty well behaved, but they do have their quirks. Last week we had a huge rain storm here, we got about 4+ inches of rain. My one dog decides she doesn't want to do her business in the wind and rain, I'm outside with her at night, getting soaked pleading with her to go but she doesn't, so I bring her in.

At 6am I am awakened by my mom calling me saying she stepped in pee. I'm groggy and slow to get up, but I'm thinking it's not that big of a deal to have to clean up some pee. My mother has lost her sense of smell and also needs to use a walker to get around. She goes to the bathroom and comes back and I hear her holler again saying she stepped in poop.

I'm finally up and find out that my mother ran her one of her walker wheels through the dog poop and tracked it all the way down the hall on her trip to the bathroom and back.

It took me the better part of the morning to get it all cleaned up.
 
My sympathies to you with your trials with your pets and child.

I've got pets and parents. My dad is 81 years old, 95% deaf, refuses to wear a hearing aid, and is starting to become very forgetful. I've got 2 dogs and my dad loves to toss food to them on the floor. He did this in his old house all the time, but in my house the kitchen is carpeted (not my choice, the people who owned it before me did it). It doesn't matter what it is, bread, french fries, pizza crust, cheese, fruit. I've pleaded with my dad, screamed, yelled, threatened, but he keeps on doing it and each time he says he "accidentally dropped it", you don't accidentally drop big chunks of food every meal every day. So I've got 2 overweight dogs and a very stained kitchen carpet.

For the most part my dogs are pretty well behaved, but they do have their quirks. Last week we had a huge rain storm here, we got about 4+ inches of rain. My one dog decides she doesn't want to do her business in the wind and rain, I'm outside with her at night, getting soaked pleading with her to go but she doesn't, so I bring her in.

At 6am I am awakened by my mom calling me saying she stepped in pee. I'm groggy and slow to get up, but I'm thinking it's not that big of a deal to have to clean up some pee. My mother has lost her sense of smell and also needs to use a walker to get around. She goes to the bathroom and comes back and I hear her holler again saying she stepped in poop.

I'm finally up and find out that my mother ran her one of her walker wheels through the dog poop and tracked it all the way down the hall on her trip to the bathroom and back.

It took me the better part of the morning to get it all cleaned up.

Ouch and damn! You poor thing. You have my deepest sympathy.
 
My sympathies to you with your trials with your pets and child.

I've got pets and parents. My dad is 81 years old, 95% deaf, refuses to wear a hearing aid, and is starting to become very forgetful. I've got 2 dogs and my dad loves to toss food to them on the floor. He did this in his old house all the time, but in my house the kitchen is carpeted (not my choice, the people who owned it before me did it). It doesn't matter what it is, bread, french fries, pizza crust, cheese, fruit. I've pleaded with my dad, screamed, yelled, threatened, but he keeps on doing it and each time he says he "accidentally dropped it", you don't accidentally drop big chunks of food every meal every day. So I've got 2 overweight dogs and a very stained kitchen carpet.

For the most part my dogs are pretty well behaved, but they do have their quirks. Last week we had a huge rain storm here, we got about 4+ inches of rain. My one dog decides she doesn't want to do her business in the wind and rain, I'm outside with her at night, getting soaked pleading with her to go but she doesn't, so I bring her in.

At 6am I am awakened by my mom calling me saying she stepped in pee. I'm groggy and slow to get up, but I'm thinking it's not that big of a deal to have to clean up some pee. My mother has lost her sense of smell and also needs to use a walker to get around. She goes to the bathroom and comes back and I hear her holler again saying she stepped in poop.

I'm finally up and find out that my mother ran her one of her walker wheels through the dog poop and tracked it all the way down the hall on her trip to the bathroom and back.

It took me the better part of the morning to get it all cleaned up.

Wow. Sounds like you've got a very difficult situation there. WRT your dad's habit, I would suggest replacing the kitchen carpet with tile, and then perhaps putting rushes down on top of that.:D
 
Wow. Sounds like you've got a very difficult situation there. WRT your dad's habit, I would suggest replacing the kitchen carpet with tile, and then perhaps putting rushes down on top of that.:D

I was thinking about that, too. I'm thinking carpet remnant, strategically placed under Dad's chair and a special bowl of healthy treats for Dad to "accidentally" drop on the floor for the dogs. I wonder if Father would go for that...
 
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