Dear Ace: I don’t need a Father’s Day card


I don’t want a Father’s Day card from my dog.

While I may — colloquially — refer to myself, or permit others refer to me, as “Ace’s dad,” I don’t see myself as exactly that, especially if he ever decides he wants to go to college, in which case the best I could do would be to buy him a handbook on how to apply for doggie student loans.

I don’t like to call myself Ace’s father (for that either humanizes him or dogizes me). I don’t like the term “owner” (too reminiscent of slavery), or “caretaker” (for that is something mutual that we do for each other). “Partner” doesn’t work either. (Though it comes closest, the word  has come to have extra connotations in modern society.)

Friend will suffice nicely.

And no card — Hallmark or otherwise — is necessary.

Father’s Day cards from the dog — and this is no big surprise — are becoming more popular, which is just fine with greeting card companies.

The Washington Post’s John Kelly commented on the phenomenon in a column this week:

“When I was at CVS, I saw Father’s Day cards for your dog. Not for you to give to your dog, but for the dog to give to the man of the house …

“Hallmark is brilliant. They don’t let a little thing like our traditional notion of Father’s Day — that it’s a day for [human] children to give cards to their [human] paternal units — stand in the way of sales. They know that they can add millions in revenue to their bottom line if they can just expand the boundaries of Father’s Day.”

One of the things I most like about dogs is that, unlike us, they don’t fall prey to such marketing and gimmickry. Dogs don’t buy Father’s Day cards. Dogs dont get on the computer and invest in stocks or sign up for matchmaking services. Dogs don’t try to buy one and get one free, or enter contests. (You may already be a weiner dog.)

To be clear, we’re not talking here about Father’s Day cards that merely have images of dogs — but personalized cards, meant to be from the dog.

Here’s one I found on Squidoo, the inside of which reads:

“I’m all wags for my woof-woof-woofunderful Dad!”

The one at the top of this post is from Zazzle.com, which has a wide selection.

Petside.com offers several you can print out, and they appeared to be free.

A more philanthropic option is to order dad an ecard through the Maryland SPCA – and a portion of profits goes to benefit homeless animals in the shelter.

I’m not telling you how to live your life. Feel free to buy a card for Dad and pretend it’s from the dog. (Feel free, too, to purchase Dad a far more useful Travels with Ace calendar, half of the profts from which go to Rolling Dog Farm, a sanctuary for deaf, blind and disabled animals in New Hampshire.)

I’m just saying that — even though cards with dogs on them are my favorite — I don’t need a card from Ace, or even a card from my human son, who’s now visiting with me.

Every day with them is a gift already (sorry, greeting card companies). If you feel the need to spend money, make a donation to an animal shelter in honor of dad.

I think that would be much more woof-woof-woofunderful.

Comments

Comment from selkie
Time June 14, 2012 at 9:31 am

I’m withyou- far better use of funds would be a donation to an animal shelter of their choice. I love my animals to bits – I have been known to call them my “babies” – to say, come to “mummy” but reality is that I am not their mother – and to suggest otherwise would be to make them what they are NOT. My trainer says the biggest issue with dogs these days is people not letting them be DOGS but humanizing them – which is bad for the dogs and bad for the owners and is largely responsible, he feels, for the number of unsocialized, unruly dogs that end up being dumped. The only one of my many animals that truly thinks I am his “mum” is one of my cats – who I fed from a week old; he was the sole survivor of a litter dumped out to die on a freezing cold January night … my son’s friend found him barely alive and brought him to me. When you feed a tiny little scrap of a kitten every couple of hours and that same kitten sleeps under your hair every night they get mixed up LOL!

Comment from MaggieMalone
Time June 15, 2012 at 2:25 pm

To each his/her own. I see you’re trying to make light of this, but I find your article condescending and judgemental. Unless you’re contributing to my bank account every month, don’t tell me how you think it’s best for me to spend my money.

I couldn’t have children and my dogs are my family. Did I give birth to them? Of course not. But I adopted them, I feed them, clean them, talk to them, care for their health, love and cuddle them. They are the closest thing to children that I will have. So if it makes me feel not so alone to get a card “from” my dogs on Mother’s Day (Father’s Day for you), what’s the harm? I donate plenty to the local shelter as well as national rescue groups. I foster and rescue animals when needed. I think a $2 card that makes me smile once a year isn’t too much to ask.

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