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.
BBE:
Did he drink a lot? Alcoholics or people who drink a lot typically do not eat sweets.
BBE, It never even occured to him that you might have bought it for YOURSELF since he was ALL ABOUT HIM, so I would see this as another indication of his Narcissistic bent….
Donna,
Just nail or screw chicken wire to the screens you have. I do this in New York City, believe it or not — where you don’t need to train a squirrel to go “psycho.” The critters around here are capable of going psycho all by themselves.
And behind_blue_eyes,
Check out the Web site for the Office of Medical and Scientific Justice for lawsuits/criminal plea bargains regarding people who are “HIV positive.” Interesting stuff. The courts can’t actually prove that they spread an infection, because the tests are crap. The prosecution can’t get any “experts” to testify at trial. So if you think your spath might have tried to “infect” you, you may be right; I wouldn’t put it past the creep. But if you think he/she will ever succeed in infecting anyone through sex, there’s a lot of science against that, including the CDC’s own statistics on sexual transmission. In fact, there’s such an absence of proof that anyone can maliciously infect another person with HIV sexually that prosecutors arrange a quick plea bargain as soon as the topic is brought up.
Your spath will have to find other ways to kill people.
BBE,
why do HIV+ people avoid sweets?
It sounds like he was angry because he really DOES like sweets but tries to avoid them and the pie was a temptation for him.
Louise;
He did drink a lot but it was not about that. He was ANGRY that I bought the pie. He likes sweets. He just can’t eat them.
Oxy:
Yep, that is how I immediately saw it!
BBE:
I see…
Skylar;
HIV+ people avoid sweets for a variety of reasons. The main reason is to minimize Thrush infections. Also, some have Triglyceride issues due to meds.
BTW, I talked abut my health problems at the time with the x-spath and he did mention he had high Triglyceride levels which I found curious for somebody thin and reasonably young. Did not make the connection at the time.
I work on a volunteer basis with people diagnosed with diseases who seek alternatives to the usual bullying to take very toxic standard treatments, end their sex lives, get their kids tested, etc. I can tell you that the pressure is immense, coercive, and Orwellian. But I can also tell you that many people invite that coercion into their lives, because suddenly, it’s “all about them.” And when they become “disease activists,” they can take control of others in turn. In sum, it’s a big spath playground — both for some patients to control others, and others to control patients. Pharma companies have become very, very good at pushing all the narcissism buttons in populations that have generally not experienced a lot of acceptance.
I myself escaped the spathology of cancer. This was a life-changing, scarring, horrible experience for me, that I find difficult to describe to anyone who has not been through it. I actually believe my personality changed. I am not even the same person, can’t remember a lot of things from my life before PTSD took hold.
I could quote you some of the toxic e-mails I’ve received from some really important people. I mean, millions of dollars in government grants, high positions, authorities in their fields. They’re just chilling, and Exhibit A for how spaths operate in the medical field.
Thrush is caused by candida albicans, a fungus. And sugar encourages the growth of fungus. A person can get thrush if HIV positive or not. The common denominator is a shot immune system, and that can be caused by a lot of things, too. You are describing a psychologically toxic person, and I believe that contributes to the growths in our bodies. Rotten people attract rotten bugs. You’re onto something here . . . keep digging.