People will never understand our love for our pets as pet parents

People will never understand our love for our pets as pet parents

People will never understand our love for our pets as pet parents

This was originally published on www.pawdel.com in June 10, 2021

For the past couple of weeks, I had been discussing Pawdel with entrepreneurs and business leaders as part of my business networking activity. None of these intelligent and successful professionals are from my industry — pet care. I even talked to men and women who openly admitted they’re not fond of pets. Some even have cynophobia, a fear of dogs. But not all of them don’t have pets. A handful of them also owns a dog or a cat, pure-bred and not. But none of them could understand, at least initially, why I founded Pawdel, let alone why such businesses exist!

Not all pet owners are pet lovers. Even so, not all pet lovers are pet parents.

Over the last two and a half years since I founded Pawdel as a home-based e-commerce business, I mostly built it behind a computer. With no background, network, or experience in the pet-care industry, I relied heavily on the hyper-targeting power of digital marketing to connect Pawdel with pet parents all over the country and the rest of the world. I seldomly had a chance encounter with a non-pet lover. When I did, it would always be a limited encounter on matters outside of Pawdel. Our social life over a year into the pandemic, professionally and personally, slowly isolated me further in a bubble. I somehow forgot treating pets as a baby was once considered an eccentric behavior not too long ago. But this experience I had over the past couple of weeks was a reality check. Not all pet owners are pet lovers. Even so, not all pet lovers are pet parents.

They celebrate too
They celebrate too

Pet parent

What is a pet parent you may ask? Many pet owners own a dog, or bantay, as we fondly call them because they merely guard a property. Many pet owners own a cat, or ming-ming, as people would generically call them because they’re more efficient than any sophisticated pest-control companies in keeping rodents away. Pet lovers on the other hand may or may not own a pet, but nevertheless gets a dopamine flush at every sight of a cute fluffy dog or cat. This kind of love, particularly for non-pet owners, is superficial. It’s a kind of love that is fleeting, especially when it starts to get messy, figuratively or literally. Pet lovers who own a pet undoubtedly love their dog or cat.

But there are several degrees of love. So, no, I’m not talking about that kind of pet love. I’m talking about the kind of love that is close to my favorite analogy — to a love of a parent. Before I go deeper into defining pet parents, I want to be clear that I’m not generalizing or stereotyping pet owners or pet lovers. I’m only defining it as such to give context and a more clear understanding of what I would call a pet parent. I will never forget what my mother once told me, and I heard this too from many a mother to their child, that even their own child will never understand the pain they feel when their son or daughter is in hardships, nor will they ever understand their joy when they are triumphant in their lives. True to my mother’s word, I never understood it until I became a parent myself — a parent to an Aspin, 3 Chihuahuas, and a Shih Tzu.

Giving it all for my dog more than what I have

So what makes a pet parent different from a pet lover? Don’t they both love their pets just the same? I thought they were until I met a business contact in the pet care industry. This man owns a mid-size pet supplies business. We were having a meeting one evening when the cost of veterinary care was brought up in the conversation. So I shared my story of how much I went through during the confinement of Patchi after he was diagnosed with late-stage ehrlichiosis. Patchi, by the way, is the paw-founder of Pawdel along with Robby and Kiwi. I stayed beside Patchi every day of his confinement. I only went home to sleep and mostly stayed in the clinic 5 to 6 hours a day. Never missed a day. One time, I was out of town 4 hours away when I pleaded with the clinic to wait for me past 9 pm just so Patchi can see me that day because I didn’t want to let a day go by without him seeing me. If that would give Patchi even the slightest chance of improving his recovery, I did it.

It had taken 2 weeks of confinement before the veterinarian deemed it safer to bring him home for home-care. She was probably aware that my veterinary bills had already been mounting. After 3 weeks of trying to stabilize his condition, Patchi took his last breath in my and Rasmia’s arms. I was sobbing like a kid early in the morning at 3 am. In fact, I just cried again after writing these last few sentences trying to recollect the memories.

…I, on the other hand, whose full-time business Pawdel at the time, was hardly making a profit in its first 11 months, would be willing to pay the same amount twice over if it meant bringing Patchi back to life.

Patchi's last days with us while in home care

Patchi's last days with us while in home care

I told this man that I ended up paying over Php 80,000.00 in veterinary bills in a span of one month. I lost Patchi and the two puppies of Kiwi in the same month. What he remarked after I had narrated my story disconcerted me, “I love my dogs too, Arrian. I have many of them. But I wouldn’t pay the amount you paid for my own dogs if it had happened to me.”

Pet lovers like him, as is expected, generally regard dogs as they are… mere animals, a lower being, a 2nd class member of the family.

It disconcerted me because here I was talking to a person who was making a fortune out of dogs and cats, yet he wouldn’t give up a fraction of that fortune for his own dogs. While I, on the other hand, whose full-time business Pawdel at the time, was hardly making a profit in its first 11 months, would be willing to pay the same amount twice over if it meant bringing Patchi back to life. I wondered if this man would say the same thing had it been his children we were talking about? I doubt! But I wouldn’t judge him. To be fair, there’s nothing wrong with where he stands. Pet lovers like him, as is expected, generally regard dogs as they are… mere animals, a lower being, a 2nd class member of the family. Since then I realized my love for my dogs is different. I am a different pet lover. More so I am a different person in this society that we live in. But how different?

I once regarded pet parenting as an odd and eccentric behavior

At this point, I may have already proven my point that I know what exactly feels like to be a pet parent. But I also know how people feel towards pet-parents like me. You see, I was once on the other side of the fence. I wasn’t born a pet parent. But I’m a pet lover my whole life.

One of our rare pure-bred dogs in the household, Kookai.

One of our rare pure-bred dogs in the household, Kookai

Our loyal rescued Aspin, Barnie

Our loyal rescued Aspin, Barnie

Another rescued kitten, Benny.

Another rescued kitten, Benny.

My mother picked up the kittens from a garbage in Puregold.

My mother picked up the kittens from a garbage in Puregold.

I grew up with dogs and cats in the household for as far back as my memory can recall. So the love has always been there. Then I moved out at age 21 and lived in an apartment that disallowed pets. I lived 4 years without a pet until we later rescued Robby on New Year’s eve of 2015.

It didn’t immediately occur to me that Lex was a dog because Hensyl spoke of Lex, and her other dog, Lana, as if they were a person. After I found this out, all of a sudden, Hensyl’s behavior was rather odd and eccentric to my standards of pet care.

It was 2012 and I was working for a Swiss pharmaceutical company. I had a colleague whose name is Hensyl. She was unmarried but not necessarily lonely. Hensyl and I weren’t the closest of friends. But I knew she had a Lex in her life. I would hear from my colleagues that she had to leave early because Lex was home alone. When we were having our meeting she would say she had to make it quick because Lex was waiting outside. That’s perfectly understandable. Not until I found out later that Lex was a dog! It didn’t immediately occur to me that Lex was a dog because Hensyl spoke of Lex, and her other dog, Lana, as if they were a person. After I found this out, all of a sudden, Hensyl’s behavior was rather odd and eccentric to my standards of pet care.

Hensyl wasn’t wealthy, as we were both a corporate slave, but pet grooming, all-natural food and treats, pet strollers, and all the niceties of pet care were a luxury in 2012. Nowadays, we see pet grooming salons in every corner of the Metro and pets are increasingly welcome in every major commercial establishment in the country. The humanized lifestyle of pets is no longer exclusive to the rich and famous. It’s a generational trend that is already happening all around the world. Hensyl was years ahead of many pet lovers like myself. She may have already forgotten who I am and what I do in Pawdel. But I will never forget Hensyl. That may explain why she still hasn’t purchased a single item from us. I think it’s my karma for condescending her for being what I call now a pet parent. Hensyl, Lex, and Lana were the butt of jokes in the group. Regrettably, it was cute-shaming.

I was a pet lover and a reluctant pet owner

Newly adopted Robby
Newly adopted Robby

 

Robby was my first dog as the primary caregiver. The responsibility is leaps and bounds different compared with before wherein you just pat their head, play with them and leave the rest of the responsibility to your mother. I certainly believe raising Robby advanced my maturity, patience, and discipline by several years. That responsibility translated my love for them as if my dogs are my children.

Resting Robby
Resting Robby

 

Between 2011 and 2015, I would jump at every opportunity to go for a quick vacation out of town on a long weekend. When I finished early from work, I would grab a bottle of beer or whiskey with my associates and come home late. My girlfriend and I would go to the mall every weekend to pass time. I enjoyed the break from having a dog and cat my whole life.

Momma's boy, Robby

Rasmia and I adopted Robby on her insistence. I was reluctant to adopt him because our apartment in Fort Bonifacio strictly disallowed pets. It was also a small apartment. And from my own experience of having Aspins in a small house all my life, I knew the shedding would be the worst part. But Rasmia left for overseas work 3 months after adopting Robby. We had been living together since 2013. As if the psycho-emotional challenges of suddenly being in a long-distance relationship were not enough, the responsibility of both house chores and Robby were unbearable. I had to bathe him every Sunday. He would free himself from his leash and I’d run after him all over the neighborhood. But Robby didn’t give me a hard time. He helped me overcome loneliness and a job loss. He helped me navigate the most critical decisions in my career.

Any Aspin pet parent would know what I’m talking about. The condescending looks and smiles they would give show they couldn’t understand why we would give so much for an unbred dog that is valued so little.

Robby grew big enough for my landlord to notice his disturbance. So he gave me an ultimatum. Give him up or move out. Where else would I bring Robby? Leave him behind back in the streets? I was a pet lover and a reluctant dog owner but I chose to be a pet parent. It was my first time giving my all for a dog. I had to get a bigger 3-bedroom house that was mortgaged from a bank. I didn’t need it, but I wanted it to keep Robby, and later on Patchi. Moving to a bigger pet-friendly apartment in Taguig was impractical. Rasmia and I would have to pay over twice the lease of the previous one without ever owning it. The logical choice was to build our home and our family (fur-family included) in Cavite where I invested in a residential lot earlier in my career. I told myself I never want to hear again that my dogs are unwanted, especially my Aspin. Robby being kicked out was the first time I felt the pain of a parent. Rasmia and I would proudly talk about him with our friends. Not everyone was fascinated with an unwanted Aspin. Any Aspin pet parent would know what I’m talking about. The condescending looks and smiles they would give show they couldn’t understand why we would give so much for an unbred dog that is valued so little.

Robby in Tagaytay Highlands
Robby taken to the country club on his third day with us

Pet parents love their dogs and cats more than their close circle of friends

Becoming a pet parent wasn’t an overnight transformation. It was a long psychological and emotional process. As I matured deeper into my adulthood, the weekend basketball games turned into Sunday bath times for Robby and Patchi. I traded the fun night out for dinner with the two furboys. Morning workouts became pee and poo time with my dogs. These routines became our bonding moments. My responsibility with them consumed me.

They licked my tears when I closed my first business. They happily and proudly wore my first iterations of the AlphaCollar even when everyone else thought it wasn’t as beautiful as I initially believed it to be.

These responsibilities slowly isolated me from my friends and colleagues who still had enough time to spare for some leisure or extra work. Robby and Patchi were now my confidants when I had quarrels with Rasmia, when I was successful in my first business, and they were consulted when I was designing the interior and exterior of our brand new house. Everything had to go well with Robby and Patchi. The furnitures, pavement, and the garden (where they can freely do their nasty business). Robby, Patchi, and later on Kiwi were also witnesses to my struggles. They stared back at me when I was staring blankly when I had had a quarter-life crisis dragging my feet to work. They licked my tears when I closed my first business. They happily and proudly wore my first iterations of the AlphaCollar even when everyone else thought it wasn’t as beautiful as I initially believed it to be. They jumped on me whenever I happily danced after occasionally receiving online orders that were several days in between. Patchi favored sitting on my lap and leaning on the steering wheel when I drove them in the car. But he was still enjoying the ride of a public bus after I had given up my car, unable to pay anymore the mortgage. As long as he’s seated on my lap and could see throughout the window, he was content with it.

I was happy that Patchi was able to ride again in “his brand new company car” for the first and last time during our trip to the vet, which later diagnosed him with ehrlichiosis.
I was happy that Patchi was able to ride again in “his brand new company car” for the first and last time during our trip to the vet, which later diagnosed him with ehrlichiosis.

 

And for these experiences together I grew closer to my dogs than my own circle of friends. In fact, I am now closer to them than my immediate family. They knew everything I went through – the triumphs and defeats of life – while my biological family didn’t. My dogs still loved me regardless if I served them leftover food or premium dog food. Neither did they judge me if I was penniless or thriving. They couldn’t care less if we took the tricycle or drove an SUV, as long as we all arrive together to wherever it leads us. They love me unconditionally and I love them back for being the greatest companion during these last 6 years of my life. Because of these, mas mahal ko na sila kesa sa mga kaibigan ko [I love them more than my friends]. They say what connects a mother to a child is the 9 months she bore them through her umbilical cord. And the years that followed to raise that child. A couple of years of raising Robby and the rest of my dogs like my own children is what connects me to them like a parent. To me, they are not lesser beings. Nor they are a 2nd class member of the family. They too are my loved ones, my immediate family. They are my equal companions.

#LoveYourPawdel opens a new lifestyle to a whole new generation of pet parents

I was once guilty of cute-shaming Hensyl. It’s a vindication to all pet parents like Hensyl that Pawdel leads a new humanized lifestyle for pets. A humanized pet companion deserves a humanized lifestyle. My team and I have personally read all 1,135 entries of pet parents’ #LoveYourPawdel stories in the Philippines’ Next Top Pawdel. While we only have 6 Next Top Pawdels of the month so far, it was a relief to know there are so many more people out there like me and Hensyl. It’s hard to pick a winner out of hundreds every month. I wish we could feature them all to inspire more pet owners out there who have a subdued humanized relationship with their pets waiting to be nurtured.

The real-life pet-human relationships we share and nurture at Pawdel reassure pet parents that it is ok to be different; that being different is beautiful, to love your pawdel like one of your own.

Their stories only inspire us to strive harder in nurturing their relationship with their pets. Where they can connect with us and find comfort in knowing there are more pet parents out there like us. They are the next generation of hope to raise the general public’s perception of pets from mere animals [hayop lang ‘yan] to our equal companions [parang anak ko na ang mga ‘yan].

The real-life pet-human relationships we share and nurture at Pawdel reassure pet parents that it is ok to be different; that being different is beautiful, to love your pawdel like one of your own.

Robby, a happy rescued stray puppy
Robby, a happy rescued stray puppy

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