As I was trying to come up with an idea for this week’s blog post, my husband, Terry, made a suggestion: “Why don’t you write about Psycho Squirrel?”
Last fall, we started tossing peanuts in the shells to squirrels in our backyard. We were captivated by the show they put on as they acrobatically chased each other along the fence and through the tree branches. Plus, we liked being nice to our furry neighbors.
Most of the squirrels picked up the peanuts and scurried away, burying them to eat in the winter. A couple of squirrels, however, were smart. They learned that humans meant food, and every time they saw us, bounded over to the ground below our back deck. They’d sit on their hind legs, twitch their tails, and look up at us expectantly. Of course, they were rewarded with peanuts.
Aw, aren’t they cute?
Well, they started getting brave, and crept up the steps of the deck. We opened the back door, which led into the kitchen, and tossed out a peanut. The squirrels scurried away with the peanuts, buried them, and came back for more. So then we squatted down low, cracked open the full-length glass storm door, and held the peanuts at their nose height. They were skittish at first, but soon began taking the peanuts right from our fingers.
They’d sit on the deck, hold the peanut to their mouths and roll it, as if looking for a place to bite the shell. Sometimes they ate the peanuts, and sometimes they ran away, buried them, and came back for more. If we weren’t right at the door, we could hear them tapping on the glass with their tiny claws.
Aren’t they cute?
We ended up with three “pet squirrels—”one day they all kept coming to the door like a tag team. Eventually, if they saw us, they’d leap through the trees to the ground below the deck and then run up the steps. When they saw us walking up the driveway, they followed. We started keeping a small ceramic bowl filled with peanuts on the counter next to the back door, so they’d be handy when our squirrel buddies showed up. We imagined that they really appreciated us when 18 inches of snow blanketed the ground and all their peanuts from the fall were hidden.
A few weeks ago, spring finally arrived, and we exchanged the glass in the storm door for a screen. We hadn’t seen the squirrels in awhile, but one showed up. She looked well fed, but still remembered how to beg for a handout.
I opened the screen door, held a peanut low for her, and she took it. She came back several times; I fed her about five peanuts. Then I had to go back to work. I closed the screen door, but the main back door was open to let the warm breeze into the house.
A couple of hours later I walked back into the kitchen and stopped short. The screen by the door handle was shredded—someone had broken into the house! Then I noticed the ceramic bowl was empty, there were broken peanut shells all over the floor, and a small yellow puddle on the counter.
The squirrel had chewed through the screen, eaten all the peanuts, and left. I couldn’t believe it. I shut the main back door—wood with glass panes at the top—so she couldn’t come back in. But she had learned well, and a little while later I caught her trying to climb through the hole in the screen again.
That was it. Now it was No Contact with the squirrel.
Terry took the screen out so it could be repaired. The squirrel didn’t know this, so when she next saw me in the kitchen, she leaped at the door, expecting to cling to the screen. Instead, she slammed into the regular door with its glass panes. With nothing to hold on to, she slid to the deck.
We stayed on the No Contact program, even though the squirrel kept following us around the yard and begging. No more handouts, no more bowl of peanuts on the counter by the door. In fact, since we couldn’t really tell the squirrels apart, none got fed. One overly aggressive squirrel had ruined it for everyone.
After a couple of weeks, hoping the pushy squirrel had forgotten that she had been sponging off of us, we replaced the screen, which had cost $25 to fix. It was fine for awhile, but the other day, I walked into the kitchen to find holes in the screen next to the door handle. She didn’t forget. But at least there were no peanuts on the counter, so the squirrel didn’t come in.
Now the screen needs to be repaired again. “That squirrel owes me $50 for the two screens,” Terry complained.
We don’t think the squirrel is going to pay. In fact, it’s probably going to cost us even more, because now Terry has decided we should invest in pet-proof screens.
Sigh. And it all started because the squirrels were so cute and we wanted to be friendly.
breckgirl:
Me, too! I am not a caller.
I am glad you have found someone nice.
Spathinator: Yeah, that was an interesting observation about food. I’m going to start paying attention. Maybe spaths just don’t care about much food. Like they have no connection to even food, or maybe the sensation and smells or memories that also comes with food for the rest of us does not exist for them. It’s all just fake and processed for them, like everything else.
Then again, some people just don’t have developed tastes. Just like some people have poor sight, or can’t hear, or don’t care about listening or seeing. I’ve noticed some spaths also don’t have a connection to music. Like it has no soul or emotion to them. 🙁
breckgirl: You kidding about that prison thing? Solitary would be the BEST place to be, in my opinion, by far. I would think most people would not want to be out among the others, especially the violent. 🙁 Unless they are like them…
Hmm, this is pretty interesting. I’ve never studied attachments like this before. I wonder where a schizoid and sociopath would fit in. Not to mention the other personality disorders. None of them would be secure, I bet.
That example you gave me about yourself answered my question! I also spent some time after reading your initial post to study up on it. Thanks for teaching it to me! It was very helpful, even about myself. Thanks for taking the time to post that as well. I think I’m the anxious type. Definitly not secure, yet. ^_^
Near – a personality disordered person would register / test as an avoidant for sure – but not all avoidants are necessarily disordered …. Just more emotionally cool people who have fear around attaching to another.
I love that you wrote: ” Definitely not secure, yet. ^_^” – the yet being key – one thing the authors said is that it is possible to change types due to extreme life circumstances and anxious types can become secures with the help of other secures… Likewise a secure could become anxious or avoidant after a relationship with a S/P/N ….
Near:
Interesting! I asked my X spath one time if he liked a certain musical artist and his reply was “I don’t listen to music much.” Hmmmm…
Near,
I guess you are new so you don’t know: the spath is an emotionally retarded individual.
OK the correct term is emotionally arrested, but – whatever.
When you observe the spath, you are observing someone with the emotions of a 2 year old or younger. Read the book, “Why is it always about you?” by Sandy Hotchkiss, it will answer all your questions.
Literally, not figuratively, the spath is stuck in an emotional state exactly like the emotions of an infant. His need to be parasitical and manipulitive is because the infant NEEDS to be this way in order to survive, he has no claws, fur or teeth. The 3 ploys : Charm Pity and Rage are what infants do to make sure that their parents don’t abandon or EAT them. (yes, people used to eat their children in times of famine – it was common in all primitive cultures, including the greeks, romans and hebrews). What you are observing in the spath is simply someone who was very successful in manipulating the emotions of adults so they have decided to continue this particular survival strategy, because it works for them. They will charm you with love bombing or they will use the pity ploy to guilt you or, if that fails, they rage and scream until you give in because you just want it to stop. I call them the “three trick pony”. Most variations of spath behavior fall into one of these three manipulative behaviors.
There are a few additional things that they do, which underscore that they are infants: they brown nose authorities, for one. They will always suck up to cops and judges and anyone else they perceive to be an authority so that they are protected when they are caught being evil.
There are many things that are cookie cutter behaviors of spath and children. This is the root of the spath: infantile.
Oh and BTW, yeah, narcissism, which is what all spaths have to a malignant degree, demand attention 24/7. So the solitary isolation is HELL for them. I’m like you, give me time alone with 100 good books and I’m happy. Why would I choose the gen pop over 100 good books?
spathinator:
LOVE it!!! Thank you so much for the info. Makes all perfect sense. Mine had charm and pity. Never saw rage. And the brown nosing. He knew who to suck up to for sure.
Yep, give me some good reading material and I could be alone for a long time.
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spathinator;
I have said this several times. I should post a link to this one particular dating website profile of my x-spath because it is so textbook.
When I first saw it, “juvenile” was the first thought which came to my mind. It read very much like that of a 15 year-old, not that of a 35 year-old. The profile name was “XYZboy25,” probably chosen to imply younger at at first glance. Of course he used a picture in which he looks about 25…
He dresses almost entirely in American Eagle Outfitters, attire more appropriate for a teenager/early 20 something, not mid 30s…
He favorite food? “I get munchies for pizza.”
spath said (who knows what the truth was …she was suuuuch a liar) that she loved ice cream and cereal. in the real world the spath is a diabetic. and she could steal pictures of someone eating ice cream. who knows what’s true, but that’s about the only food she talked about.
I have an interesting story regarding food, anger, unmasking and my x-spath.
I bought a pie to eat as a snack. He walked into my dinning room, looked at the pie and very angrily said “Why did you get that? I told you I don’t like sweets…”
I never experienced anything like that and its not like he was on a diet or anything. To defuse things, I reminded him I generally don’t eat a lot of sweets, I had just bought it for the atmosphere, as Xmas was nearing…
Later, when I began to realize he was mostly likely hiding that he is HIV+, this little temper tantrum made sense, as many HIV+ individuals avoid sweets.