B-H
I have to confess that the writer of this essay is a person
who has certain difficulties in choosing the right presents even for his loved
ones. A few weeks ago, when I was visiting my home and being visited by my
children, I took my two and half year granddaughter to the store so she should
have the opportunity to choose something for herself. It is not the first time we
have done this together, and as one of the Weisers she seems to have a quiet,
mature mindset and she knows what she wants, at least when comes to toys. Part
of this mindset is the opposite of it: she certainly knows what she doesn’t
want.
We were going from aisle to aisle picking and trying all
kinds of toys, but nothing was satisfying my sweet little one. Finally, in one
of the department stores which we visited in our search, she picked up a toy
like she was actually looking for it. Her decision was made, and even though I
still tried to convince her to get something else that looked better to me, she
refused everything and stubbornly schlepped the small toy shopping cart for a whole
eight American dollars. I gave up, and after choosing a toy for her younger
sister, we returned home.
A few days later I was back in the West, but still having the
feeling that my granddaughter deserved something more than this, that the
shopping cart must be filled with something else.
While traveling (and not only then), I do a lot of my
shopping at Costco; even for some smaller items or vegetables, it pays for me
to buy there for the quality and price, even if I sometimes have to buy more
than I need at the moment.
When I entered the Costco in Albuquerque, New Mexico, right
near the door I saw a fantastic basket filled with some plush toys. The most
visible were a small teddy bear, a red-and-blue parrot and then three other
toys. All five toys were a decent price and the size I imagined would fit in
one of the flat rate boxes offered in the post office.
An incredible deal, I thought to myself: within my budget I
can make my granddaughter happy by adding something to this cheap shopping
cart.
The next day I went to the post office. Unfortunately, the
basket with the writing on it saying “My Toys” couldn’t fit in the box. I
decided to take the toys out and squish them inside the box. Without the basket
they fit perfectly.
A few days later I got this picture and this text message
from my son:
Ok, I don’t want you to get a heart attack but why did you
send DOG TOYS for your human grandkids?
Recognizing the parrot from the toy set and yet not
believing my eyes, I began to laugh almost hysterically. I felt stupid, but at
the same time, I was already imagining my great- grandchildren telling the
story about how zeidy Matys bought dog toys for his granddaughters. I was
seeing the laughter a few generations ahead, and I was fully aware that this is
exactly what I deserved for overlooking the white-on-red words: ‘dog toys’
which somehow I unnoticed.
Then slowly my laughter slowed down as I started to think –
who got crazy over here, me or the rest of the world?
DOG TOYS? Since when do dogs need something more sophisticated
than a stick or something round to play with? Do those countless owners of
canine ‘friends’ really believe that their dog appreciates playing with the
teddy bear? Do they really believe that they – the owners – are nothing more
than friends to their domesticated wolves? Are they aware that ‘appreciation’
is the action of abstract mind which those animals are lacking?
Slowly I felt my heart picking up in my head and back, as I
was going through one of those experiences when extreme surprise could cause
such a reaction in your body.
Toys for animals… people actually spending their sometimes
hard-earned resources on animals. Again, I don’t say to appease their animals
because appeasement is a human feeling and cannot be applied to animals.
We, humanity, have a huge problem. I wouldn’t blame only the
Darwinian view of the human being for this state of mind, as zoophilia was not
something unknown before Darwin, but perhaps more than ever, people think about
animals as humans and about themselves as animals. Well… if they think so...
I personally don’t keep or have ever kept any pets, as they
give a bad smell and in general are very unhygienic. But I can have some
understanding for those people who for some reason may need the company of a dog
or another pet for their hobby. But what has happened to humanity if a human
being must look for a companion in the form of an animal? Where are the
children and grandchildren of those elderly citizens who can talk only to their
dogs or cats? Are some of those young people fighting perhaps for animal
‘rights’? What has happened to humanity where some are spending millions of
dollars and a great chunk of their human lives on fighting for animals?
Somewhere in their country or even in other countries, people – human children
– are dying from hunger or an epidemic, lacking basic human living conditions,
while some of those animal defenders call their effort 'humanism’.
Sure – adopting a human child may not be more expensive than
buying food, medicine, and TOYS for DOGS, but it does require some greater responsibility.
But what about spending the same money by giving it to some legitimate charity
helping under-developed human societies to survive or even to develop? Why do dogs
deserve better in their minds, and why do those people see themselves as more
humane than others? I’m sure that if they would look harder they would find
some fellow human beings in need on their street, around the corner, somewhere
in a close neighborhood. How crocked is a society that spends billions of
dollars a year for treating animals better than humans? Is there any hope?
Let me tell you a story about one of my favorite presidents,
President Lincoln himself.
While without a doubt he was a man of higher conscience, my
story will illustrate something that the Tanya describes in one of its chapters
– go and see.
President Lincoln was traveling in a horse and wagon through
heavy rain. The road was muddy and streams of water and mud were flowing from
the hill on the side of the road. He spotted a sow trying to help her piglet to
climb up the small mound, but every time the piglet was pushed up by his mother
it would slide down on the liquid mud. President Lincoln jumped out of the wagon
and ran through the rain, picked up the
piglet and put it on the top of the hill.
When he returned to his wagon he was asked by the driver of
the wagon –
-
Mr. President, you must be a very altruistic person to
do such a thing for that animal, especially in such harsh conditions.
-
No – answered President Lincoln – not in this case at
least; I did it for myself. I couldn’t watch this struggling animal, and that’s
why I did it.
This nice story shows us perhaps something greater about
President Lincoln than most people can see in it. He admitted that it was HIS
bad feeling which was discomforting him and not exactly caring about animal.
This story happened around the time when Charles Darwin,
with his book “Origin of Species,” initiated a new epoch in the history of
mankind – an epoch when people began to think about animals as humans and
themselves as animals. This time the idea was not part of some morally declined
animistic culture or religion, but a part of society considering themselves the
leading moral force of humanity, coming, however, with nothing more than a self-pleasing,
egocentric approach. Since then it only became worst.
Matys Weiser
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