Uncomfortable Thoughts Inspired By My Roommate’s Rabbit

Oct. 17, 2011
Tereza studies math and trees and is trying to figure out the comparative merits of function and form. Send her ...

When our friends moved to Canmore and Africa respectively, their pet rabbit was left homeless. At their going-away party, my roommate charitably offered to give it a home in our small apartment. When she retroactively asked me whether this was fine by me, I said yes, given the understanding that it was in no way my responsibility. I even vaguely looked forward to the presence of a small, fluffy pet — my impression of rabbits is that they are relatively low-maintenance, and in general I feel positively towards small, fluffy things. I even vaguely hoped that its cuteness would provide some sort of morale boost in the depths of Montreal’s long, cold, lonely winters.

When I met the rabbit, however, I was unimpressed. It was small. It was gray. It twitched its nose. It hopped around. It shuffled in its cage and made sounds similar those of typewriter keys. And that was it. I hadn’t had any sort of high hopes for the rabbit in terms of stimulation, but I had assumed that I would at least find it cute, or that I would want to play with it a little bit, or, barring that, that I would find its general placid stupidity annoying. But my initial emotional reaction was neither even remotely positive or even remotely negative. It was nonexistent.

We tried to name the rabbit. We went through three or four names. Nothing stuck, so we just referred to it as Rabbit. This was another red flag — I’m really good at anthropomorphizing. Every bike I’ve ever owned has had a name, for instance. Either due to a tendency to whimsy or to childishness, I regularly project personality onto inanimate objects. I couldn’t project anything memorable onto this rabbit, though. How was it possible that this living, breathing vertebrate, technically evolutionarily not very different from me, had less personality than my bicycle?

Weeks passed. The rabbit continued cohabiting with us. I wanted to find it cute. I wanted to enjoy its company. Failing that, I wanted to resent it, or to be annoyed by it. Neither transpired. The rabbit could have been a slightly motile seat cushion, for all the emotion it inspired in me. It hopped around, living on the whole an extremely contented life for a rabbit in captivity. It got fed. It ate. It shat. Presumably it slept. It was good at converting food sugars to metabolic energy in the way most animals are, but that was about it.

I started worrying about my inability to feel anything for the rabbit. Did this mean I had an underdeveloped capacity for empathy? This was a fellow mammal! It was fluffy! It was objectively somewhat cute! What was it going to take? Did this mean that I would someday make a terrible mother? In a characteristically high-strung emotional move, I started feeling secondary anxiety about not having any emotions towards the rabbit. I found some solace in the fact that neither of my roommates expressed any strong feeling for the rabbit either, and that after all the rabbit didn’t seem to be expressing any strong feeling for any of us, come to think of it.

Among our wider circle of friends, a few people posited half-jokingly that we eat the rabbit. I come from a culture where rabbits are seen mostly as efficiently self-replicating assemblages of animal protein, and given the rabbit’s hitherto exceptional quality of life, it would be considerably more ethical and humane than buying an anonymous growth hormone-enhanced chicken breast at the grocery store. Local, small-scale animal cultivation, efficient resource management. I knew this, logically, but I was on some base level adverse to the idea, to say nothing of the feelings of my roommate, a vegetarian. The pet was not going to be eaten, that much was clear.

This unwillingness to kill it didn’t help me feel anything for the rabbit, though. It continued living with us, hanging out and living its rabbit life, and I continued feeling callous and uncomfortable about it. This was the first pet I didn’t care about. In high school, my brother had bought two mice, animals objectively even less interesting than the rabbit. Nonetheless we had named them (Gauley and Chittistone, after the free-flowing wild rivers of West Virginia and Alaska), and we had loved them and when they died of cancer we had been sad. When my beta fish met an untimely demise because we forgot to heat our house, I had cried. In ninth grade, I had cried during the dissection of a mollusk, although I suspect that that might actually have been because I was fourteen and had too many feelings. Was I becoming heartless with passing years?

Eventually, the rabbit resolved the issue by eating my phone charger. I was considerably annoyed at the loss of my telecommunication device, because it meant the canceling of a fun evening, but I was in some way contented too. From that day forward, I felt a calm, controlled, calculated dislike towards the rabbit. It was not a positive emotion, but it was an emotion nonetheless, and that was a small victory. After all, who are we as humans if we do not feel? TC mark

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image – Daniel Hall

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  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1363230138 Michael Koh

    Shit, thank you for reminding me that I should heat my house this winter for my betta fish and gerbils!

    • http://www.nosexcity.com NoSexCity

      Gerbils… there’s a joke just waiiiiiting to be made… *bites lip*

      • Philip

        what would it be?

      • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1363230138 Michael Koh

        I want to know too.

  • SS

    Take the rabbit out of the cage and actually hold/cuddle it. Before long, you’ll fall in love with it. It’s hard to love something that you keep in a box.

    • Nick

      You can’t cuddle rabbits, if you try they’ll just bite you!

      • SS

        Clearly you’ve never had a rabbit. If they’re well socialized, they make excellent cuddlers.

      • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1363230138 Michael Koh

        I think he means “Bunnicula”.

      • http://twitter.com/kaimcn Kai

        Exactly!

  • NYUstudent

    rabbits are stupid

  • http://twitter.com/kaimcn Kai

    I had a rabbit that my roommates called Slipper and Stew. She was a real bitch so I called her Princess and she tried to bite me often. But I’d let her out and sweep up wood chips and she was adorable when she attacked the broom.
    I left her behind when I moved and she ended up at the SPCA. I still think that letting her run free with the rabbits in my neighborhood might have been kinder. It’s hard to find a home for a bunny.

    • Kennneth

      How do you just “leave behind” an animal, a pet? Fuck you. 

      • http://twitter.com/kaimcn Kai

        I “left her behind” in the care of friends who decided later that they didn’t want the responsibility.

        I’m aware it breaks the rules of pet adoption. But, thanks?

  • coffeeandinternets

    Well, at least your emotional response to the inanimate appears unchanged — the love of your cellphone created a situation where distaste of the rabbit could emerge.

    That’s not a value judgment either, by the way.  I like my phone too.  Jury’s out on rabbits but they seem chill. 

  • http://hydeparkblvd.wordpress.com Allison Berger

    I thought this was going to be about a vibrator.

    • Andrea

      Me too. That probably says something about the state of my mind.

    • Andrea

      Me too. That probably says something about the state of my mind.

    • Andrea

      Me too. That probably says something about the state of my mind.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=68101821 Dana Leader

    Rabbits are social creatures, not hamsters with long ears. If you ignore her, she’ll ignore you; likewise if you pay attention, she’ll pay attention.

  • Kennneth

    “How was it possible that this living, breathing vertebrate, technically evolutionarily not very different from me, had less personality than my bicycle?” your probably projecting that lack of personality, no? 

    but man do rabbit ever fucking stink. 

  • Susiebrown

    Sorry not an interesting read, kinda flat

    • Tereza

      Tereza here – would love to read yours, email is under author bio

  • Bradley Tangonan

    There are now multiple cures for mouse cancer.

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