When I first met Velvel, he was peeking out from a cardboard box in the back seat of my boyfriend's Saturn wagon. I was just back from a weekend away, and John had come to pick me up from the train station with the best surprise a man can give to a woman he loves: a puppy.
A puppy! Man, I loved this puppy. A border collie-American Eskimo mix (basically a shrunken border collie, but cuter), we named him after my dad's Hebrew name, which is actually Yiddish and means "wolf," though we didn't know that at the time. He just looked like a "Velvel." You know what I mean. (We get a lot of: "Volvo?" No. "Vulva?" No. Do you think we'd name our dog Vulva? It's VEL-VEL.)
Velvel quickly became the center of our lives. Weekends consisted of taking him to the dog run or the dog beach or the dog park. I developed a very specific, high-pitched, raunchy voice for Velvel, because he had a lot to say. Remember when there was that big dog food scare? We freaked and started spending Sundays cooking huge batches of homemade dog food that filled our apartment with the disgusting aroma of chicken livers, broccoli, and bone meal. Velvel watched TV on the couch with us every night and slept on our bed. Sometimes I let him sit in the front passenger seat of the car and I took the back. We had a multistep system for brushing him out, which we did regularly and with discipline. We gossiped about the other dogs in our neighborhood and marveled at what a better and cuter and smarter dog Velvel was compared to them.
Then I got pregnant. Actually, pregnancy was fine. I still loved Velvel when I was pregnant. The night before I was to be induced, I thought more about how bringing a baby home was going to impact Velvel's life than my own. "This is going to be very hard for him," I told John. We'd have to be sensitive to his needs, we agreed. After the baby was born, we did exactly what "they" say to do: John took the newborn hat from the hospital for Velvel to smell, to prepare him for the tiny human heading his way. That was probably the last nice thing we ever did for him.
A friend of mine once told me that before he had a kid, he would have run into a burning building to save his cats. Now that he has a kid, he would happily drown the cats in the bathtub if it would help his son take a longer nap. Here is how I feel about that statement: Velvel, avoid the bathroom.