Negotiating with Cookies – The Snake

As I read in the yard, Fleegle ambles over with something dangling from his mouth.

“What have you got there?” I ask.

“I caught a snake.”

“Looks more like an old dirty rope to me.”

He drops it on the ground in front of me. “Hmm, it was a snake a moment ago when I caught it slithering through the weeds.” He paws at it. “Do you think it’s some sort of shape shifting chameleon?”

“No, I think it’s a rope.”

“I better kill it again just to make sure.” He grabs it in his teeth and shakes his head vigorously from side to side. Bits of rope and dirt fly everywhere while the length of rope whips his sides. He stops, wags his tail and trots off.

“Where are you going?”

“Even a snake deserves a proper burial,” he says over his shoulder as he disappears into the bamboo.

 

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Negotiating with Cookies – Procrastination

I’m in the kitchen fixing something to eat as I often do when procrastinating house projects when Fleegle walks in from the backyard.

“Whatcha fixing, Raud?”

“A sandwich.”

He wags his tail. “Ooo, what kind?”

“Peanut butter.”

He moves closer to my side. “With coconut oil and honey?”

“Yep.”

He nose bumps my leg. “Can I have a spoonful of coconut oil?”

“Sure.” I give him one.

He slicks his whiskers back with his tongue. “Are you going to make a fruit smoothie to go with that sandwich?”

“I hadn’t planned to.”

He looks up at the ceiling. “That roof is covered with pine needles and the gutters are full of them too. Cleaning that up is a big job. It might take all afternoon.”

He has a point. “I better have that smoothie too,” I say and get fruit out of the fridge.

Fleegle nose bumps my leg. “I’d like a strawberry, please.”

 

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Negotiating with Cookies – To Glaze or not to Glaze

“Look, Fleegle,” I say, pointing at a chocolate lab on the far side of the park. “That dog over there could be your twin.”

“I don’t look like that. He runs like he’s full of donuts. I’m much more svelte and graceful than that,” Fleegle says as he licks bits of sugar glaze off his lips.

“Those cinnamon twists are better when glazed, don’t you think?”

He nods agreement. “We should make sure and do a taste test by eating one with glaze and then one without right after.”

“Or you could eat them at the same time, alternating bites.”

He wags his tail. “Oh, that’s a good idea.”

“And then I’ll toss the ball for you and you can show me how graceful you are.”

He ignores my sarcasm. “I met a ballerina at the dog park the other day and she told me her favorite food was pizza. She said it filled her with grace.”

I shake my head. “That’s not how I remember it. Aren’t you talking about that French poodle with the wicked haircut that had gas?”

“I’m pretty sure she said grace.”

“I was glad we were outdoors. When was the last time I cleaned your ears?”

“Did you know donuts are a natural preventative to wax build up in the ear canal?”

“There’s nothing natural about donuts, Fleegle, and don’t try to change the subject.”

Fleegle sniffs my shoe. “You stepped in something.”

“I did not.”

He sniffs my other shoe. “Oh yes you did, twice. I bet that ear cleaner is good for shoe cleaning too.”

 

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Negotiating with Cookies – My Inner Flea

While sitting in the yard trying to read a book, my head is working overtime, the little voice in my thoughts is outdoing itself with a running commentary on my life. Need to do the dishes. Need to water the lawn, the plants, no, not now, wait until after the sun goes down so less water will evaporate. Need to practice drawing. Need to practice guitar. Need to practice the penny whistle.

“Please, enough already, just shut the frack up,” I half shout.

Fleegle looks up from the tennis ball he’s peeling the felt off of like it were an orange. “But I didn’t say anything.”

“Not you, me.”

“You’re telling yourself to shut up?”

“Yes.”

“I’m very sure I’ve never told myself to shut up.” He watches me for a moment. “Well, it looks like it worked because I don’t hear you saying anything.”

“No, he’s still talking, telling me about the weeds on the parking strip in front of the house, worrying me about what the neighbors must think.”

“I don’t hear him.”

“He’s inside my head, my inner critic. He’s very active today.”

“Oh, I get it, like the people who live inside the radio. They sure can talk up a storm. Has your inner critic told you to buy a Squatty Potty yet?”

“I need a Squatty Potty like I need a hole in my head.”

“But you’ve already got a hole in your head, your mouth. Is that how your inner critic got in? If you go get the ice cream, I’ll try to lure him out. Then you just shut your mouth and not let him back in.”

I shake my head. “He doesn’t like ice cream. He says it makes me fat.”

“Boy, if he doesn’t like ice cream I sense he’s going to be a tough nut to crack. Maybe you could starve him out.”

“Nope. He loves misery.”

“Hmm… sometimes when a fly lands on me, I ignore it and it just flies away.”

“But you can’t say the same about fleas.”

“Ha, so your inner critic is a flea. Let’s eat garlic pasta tonight. Fleas hate garlic, and I love noodles.”

“He says no, we have to finish the leftovers from last night.”

“What a nag. He sure is a flea. What’s he saying now?”

“That I should check you for fleas.”

“Very clever. He’s using misdirection to get you off of his trail.”

“He wants to give you a bath.”

“Cat butt!” He scratches his ear with his hind leg. “Enough already, you tell him from me to shut the frack up and stop giving you horrible ideas.”

“He’s asking when your last bath was.”

“Tell him it was this morning.”

“He says you’re lying.”

“Tell him to come out and face me and I’ll show him who’s lying. Where I come from we eat fleas.”

“He says that’s why you have worms.”

“I do not have worms,” Fleegle says and gets up to leave.

“Where are you going?”

“Anywhere, as long as it’s away from your inner flea.”

I close my book and get up to follow.

Fleegle stops and looks at me over his shoulder. “Oh no you don’t. You’re not coming with me unless you leave your inner flea behind.”

 

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Negotiating with Cookies – Fleegle Goes into Business

“Raud, we should get a cat.”

“Why?”

“Because Buck from across the street says he’ll trade me one of his biscuits for every piece of kitty Roca I can come up with.”

“You don’t need to live with a cat for that. A sandbox in the backyard will get you what you want.”

“Are you sure?”

“I know of what I speak. When I was a little boy I had a sandbox and the neighbor’s cats were in it as much as I was and they weren’t there to play.”

“It’s hard to imagine you being little.”

“”Wow, Fleegle, you’ll be all grown up and earning your own kibble, a dog with a booming trade business, and I won’t have to buy you anymore kibble.”

 

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Negotiating with Cookies – Chapstick

I hear something being dragged along the floor and look up from my desk in the den to see Fleegle halfway through his dog door, a pair of my jeans trailing him.

I call after him, “Whoa there, big fella. What do you think you’re doing?”

His rump is all that’s sticking through my side of the dog door, and his tail is held low and still, as if he’s trying not to be noticed.

“Well?” I ask.

Slowly, he backs up through the door into the den. The pant leg of my jeans hangs from his mouth. “Nothing much, just going out to the yard.”

“With my jeans?”

“Well, not really. I’m only after the plastic thingy in the pocket.”

“So you’re going to drag my jeans out in the yard and rip the pocket open to get at the lip balm?”

“Something like that. Any suggestions on how to do it better?”

I pick up my jeans and transfer the lip balm to the jeans I’m wearing. “No, not really,” I say and return to my seat at my desk.

“Boy, Raud, feeling grumpy?”

“Only a little chapped.”

 

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