Thursday, August 29, 2013

Today in Grace History: Late Submission Wins Pun-Based Pet Name Category

Today was my last day at work.

Also, today was the day poor Spotnick lost his crown to the new front-runner in pun-based names, his presence in the original competition non-existent for the sole reason that he had not yet been run over by an ATV and brought in to the clinic...

Didgeri-Don't.



Friday, August 23, 2013

Here, Beowolf.

I've always loved naming things - I was one of those kids - and I love a good, weird name.

Unfortunately, when I got my current cat, a moment of misguided charity and uncomfortable-ness made me decide to keep the name Rosie after an adult handicapped lady told me that she named her and then kissed the top of Rosie's head.

I regret this decision now.

That woman absolutely does not remember my cat and has probably named at least three more cats Rosie since then. I should have changed it to Jennyanydots when I had the chance. 

All personal regrets aside, one of my favorite things about working at the vet is hearing some of the crazy pet names. People who name their dogs Bella and Buddy seem so dull, although I do acknowledge that saying that makes me a huge hypocrite. Anyway, since I'm leaving my job soon to focus on school, I decided to indulge my curiosity and compile a list of the best of the best pet names and give them awards by category.
Enjoy.


Best Full Name
Second Place: Harvey Wallbanger (Canine)
First Place: Thadious Hoppington (Rabbit)


Best Food-Inspired Name
Second Place: (Tie) Kielbasa, Pork Fried Rice
First Place: Pou Pon (Feline)


Pets Named After Celebrities, In Order from Worst to Best
Charlie Sheen
Dale Earnhart
Bruce Lee
Bill Nye
Freddie Mercury

Best Names with the word "Fat" in them
Honorable Mentions: Fat Boy, Fat Head, and NINE pets named "Fatty"
Second Place: Fatapuss (See also "Best Puns")
First Place: Fat Bastard



Classiest
Honorable Mentions: Sinbad, Siegfried, Octavius
Third Place: Toulouse
Second Place: Hildegard
First Place: Alowycious



Best Descriptive Names*
Third Place: Fussy Butt
Second Place: Toe Licker
First Place: Tuna Breath
Honorable Mentions: Mustache Louie, One-Eyed Jack
*Fun fact, all winners in this category are cats.


Most Baffling
Third Place: Mr. Thumbs
Second Place: Oy
First Place: Pubert


Surprisingly Cute Names
Toggle
Segway
Velcro
Sequel
Jenga
Sandman
Malarkey


Best Puns
Third Place: My-Newt (Species said "Other," so I'm assuming it's an actual newt.)
Second Place: Catty Wompus
First Place: Spotnick


Worst Puns
Third Place: Maybullene (English Bulldog)
Second Place: Tie Deeogy (D.O.G.) and Shinopi (She No Pee)
First Place: Semper Fido
Honorable Mentions: Vincent Van Cat and Purrsilla.


Awesomest
The Wolfman
Snicklefritz
Beowolf
Avogadro
Megatron
Danger Kitty


Most Hilarious 
Mr. Noodle
Uncle Salty
Boobie
Spanky
Poop, Pooper, Poopie, 
Poopsie, and Poop Stain
Proud Mary
Spleen


Totally Inappropriate Names
Three-Way Tie: Osama, Hitler, and "Sexy Cat."


Animals with Best-Suited Names
Honorable Mentions: Hound named "Messerschmitt," Cornish Rex named "Nefertiti," and a French Bulldog named "Mavis."
Third Place: Doberman Pinscher named "Jebidiah"
Second Place: A dachshund named "Schnitzel"
First Place: (And I'm completely serious about this) A one-eyed basset hound named Whiskey Joe. (I've actually met Whiskey Joe, he looks like he just got back from snoozing on a front porch in the background of Fievel Goes West.)



Some fun statistics to wrap everything up:

- There are 11 orange cats named "Hobbes"
- 2 cats named "Crookshanks" and 1 actual rat named "Scabbers"
- 16 Cheechs, 1 Chong (I don't get it, either.)
- 5 Goobers and 8 Boogers


Moral of the story: It really doesn't matter what you name your pet, you're just going to end up calling it "dumbass" all the time anyway.


Friday, August 16, 2013

Leave Amanda Alone

Ah, the early 2000's. I vividly recall one of my very first ventures onto the internet - this was before I frequented the "Polly Pockets" website to play awful G-rated games - it was on our now-rustic family PC and I went to amandaplease.com, because Penelope Taynt (who I later learned was Amanda in a wig - 10-year-old mind blown) told me to. Then I sat in the office chair for an hour waiting for a 30-second clip to load and doing absolutely nothing else. I was so happy. I got to watch this pixel-y little video of their parody of "The Brady Bunch," the one where Alice is a man in drag. I was mousy and socially retarded and had all of the defining features of pre-pubescence as well as somehow, tragically, size 10 feet. Those were the days.

Remember "What I Like About You?" What a good show. How in love did you fall with Henry when he said that he'd propose at the dump?

The thing about Amanda was that she was an icon for the rest of us. She was unique and funny and true to herself - that was the best thing about her.

Now, see, my webcam does not work in the sense that it does not record video properly. All I end up with is a video of myself getting increasingly faster with audio that stays at the normal speed. Otherwise, I would have put on a long blonde wig and rolled around in my sheets dramatically. Alas, technology fails me and I must stoop to the written word and deprive the internet of five minutes of me trying to achieve the most flattering webcam face-angle and admiring my own hair.


Leave Amanda alone.

As the Season 2 Finale of "Sherlock" taught us, what the press reports is not necessarily true. Now, to clarify, I'm not saying that Amanda didn't throw a bong out of the window of a high-rise,* among other things - there's just no way for us to know the whole story. (Although any story with a flying bong is usually at least entertaining.)

Anyway, that's what's been on my mind today instead of the online exam for my last summer course. As much as I'm predisposed to harshly judge people who pierce their cheeks, (WHY DO PEOPLE DO THAT???) I hope Amanda finds her way and that I never have to hear her rap.


*Note: Add "hit by falling bong" to Worst Obituaries Ever list.

Friday, August 9, 2013

Is that rigor mortis, or are you just happy to see me?

My first real pet was a guinea pig. Three guinea pigs, actually, all of whom were equally useless creatures. The first time I ever set foot in the vet hospital was when one of them - a white, red-eyed little bastard - got a weird anus rash and we took her to the vet so she could pee down the front of my legs in the exam room. Anyway, there were three of them - Pokey, Taffy, and Flash.

Taffy was the Bunnicula doppleganger, Pokey had the appearance and personality of an elephant turd, and Flash was small and black and as it turned out, short-lived.

I was somewhere around 9 years old. Flash got sick very suddenly. I found her lying on her side in the guinea pig pen, twitching. My parents had me hold her for a few moments until she kicked it, although I don't recall the exact moment. They put her in a shoe box and put the shoe box in the garage to wait for the ground to be less frozen so we could bury her. 

The whole time the shoe box sat in the garage waiting, (a total of three or four days) I found myself strangely, magnetically drawn to it. My morbid curiosity was practically leaking out my ears, but I was socially aware enough to know that it would probably be unacceptable for me to fondle my guinea pig's corpse in the presence of others. I nursed that creepy sense of suspense and secrecy for all that it had while I waited for an opportunity to privately spend time with a dead thing for the first time ever.

When my parents were gone, I went out to the garage, took out the shoe box, and opened it. She was dead, all right. A dead guinea pig. I touched her fur - it felt the same, but the skin beneath it was cold and firm. I examined her still-open eyes, her mouth, her paws frozen in position as if she was running. I touched only her fur - I wasn't quite brave enough to do anything more. I put her back and went inside.

Over the next few days, I would sneak away to look in the shoe box. I thought of the creepy little visits as spending time with my pet, the concept of body v. soul foreign to a 9-year-old. 

I was visiting Flash one night when, in a sentimental moment, I tenderly reached into the box and picked her up. When I lifted her rear end, however, the rest of her kind of just lifted right along with it. It took a second for the horror to register, but I had a moment of terrible, terrible realization as I held her aloft - I was sitting in my garage, holding a furry black plank.  

Flash was not Flash anymore. It was both a tremendous growing-up experience, and in retrospect, a really hilarious situation. 

Sufficiently scarred for life, I dropped Flash back into the shoe box, put it back on the shelf, and ran inside to wash off all of the corpse bacteria that I could practically see crawling up my arms.

Now that my sense of soul v. body has developed, I can understand the reasoning from an 8-year-old - but it boggles my mind when adult pet owners spend unnecessary amounts of time with their pet's dead body. Due to what I now know is called rigor mortis, the aforementioned tendency also poses a significant problem to myself and the other veterinary assistants. Prime example - a challenge faced by myself and Little Dan.

There had been a euthanasia in one of the exam rooms that morning, and apparently the owners had spent several hours with the body afterwards. It's common to have to bag-and-tag a body a couple times a day, since the vets perform euthanasia and we have one of the only veterinary emergency rooms in the area. It was no surprise when Little Dan and I were asked to stretcher a dead dog back to the freezer. It was an old German Shepherd and he was already on the stretcher, so we quickly took him back and got out a bag. 

The trouble started when we began to ease the dog into the bag - he was immovable, and had stiffened into a position where his legs were splayed out in several different directions. Bagging the dog would've been an easy task if a) he'd been smaller or b) he'd been in a floppier and more bendable state, which he would have been for the first hour or so after his death. That window of opportunity had closed, however, and we were left with an impossibly rigid body and a bag that just wasn't quite big enough. 

I think we both knew that it wasn't going to work, but Little Dan and I were both fairly new assistants, so we kept our mouths shut, silently thanked the lord that there were doors separating us and our spectacle from the rest of the staff, and started by sticking the dog's upper half into the bag.

On the way in, the dog's frozen front paw caught on the bag and ripped a hole in it before either of us could respond. With a few muttered swear words, a sheepish apology to the dog, and some improvisation, we realized that the leg could not be bent without breaking it, so quickly got the dog back out and tried again.

On the second shot it seemed like the torso had gone in seamlessly. However, when I paused to pull the bag up over the dog's hips, I was greeted with a crusty snout sticking out through the hole previously created by the front paw. The situation continued more and more to resemble a slapstick comedy bit as we tried various ways to get the body bagged, our doggy friend's glassy eyes gazing back at us as if mocking our inadequacy. 

What we ended up with was two large red garbage bags and about a pound and a half of tape keeping the dog contained within them, the tip of a paw peeking out of the hole still. It was a huge fucking mess. 

In the end, appearance didn't matter - it was just going to be cremated anyway. But I'll be damned if that dog didn't put up a surprisingly fair post-mortem fight. 

The moral of the story - live adventurously, and give 'em hell once you're dead. Coincidently, I plan on that day being the first and last time I get punched in the boob by a dead dog.