http://www.theonionavclub.com/savagelove/index.php?i=2 As an avid reader of your column, I thought of you and only you for help with this problem. My grandmother, 78 and widowed, is a kind, generous woman who has seen her share of difficult times. She is a bit offbeat, but extremely conservative and religious. After my grandfather passed on, she purchased a lively little parakeet and named him Pretty Baby. Pretty has provided wonderful companionship and entertainment for my grandmother, even learning to speak to her. Pretty is an amazing mimic, repeating phrases she has taught him: "I love you!" "Lock the door!" "Give me kisses!" And so on.
The problem is the kissing... or what I recently witnessed the kissing leads to. One evening, Pretty began to squawk "Give me kisses! Give me kisses!" and my grandmother walked over to the cage and slipped one finger between the bars. Pretty Baby proceeded to "kiss" her fingernail and flutter about. She purred, "Give Grandma lovin', Pretty Baby, give Grandma lovin'." She then turned to me and said, "Pretty Baby wants to give me lovin', and he won't quiet down until he does." Pretty Baby proceeded to screech more and more loudly, as he humped my grandmother's finger wildly. She also moved it back and forth for him. I was stunned and unsure of what was happening, so I sat quietly in my chair, looking in the opposite direction, hoping that I wasn't really witnessing what I thought I was. My grandmother cleared it up quickly, saying, "He'll calm down after he climaxes," smiling away and continuing to repeat, "Give me your lovin', Pretty Baby, that's it..." When Pretty Baby was finished, she looked back at me and said, "I'd better wash my hands!" I left minutes later, unable to process what had just happened. Grandmother, however, never flinched, acting like it was an everyday occurrence.
I'm still horrified. Should I be concerned, Dan? About my grandmother? About Pretty Baby? Help!
Polly Wanna Wanker
I've been doing this job for a while now, PWW, and rarely do I get a question about a subject, sex act, position, kink, or bodily fluid that I've never had the pleasure of addressing before. But your question is definitely a first. And a treat! A grandmother jacking off her pet parakeet? That's the kind of question I live for! I almost hate to admit it-I mean, I don't want you to think I'm as sick a fuck as your grandmother is-but I was thrilled to receive your letter. Thrilled!
I was also suspicious. Could PWW be making this up? Did this grandma exist? Can you actually beat off a parakeet? Before I sought out some guest experts to address the whole beating-off-a-parakeet issue, I wrote back to PWW personally and demanded more background info. After speaking with PWW, I can report that, yes, this grandmother exists, she owns a parakeet, and she's one sick fuck.
"Birds often begin to exhibit mating behavior when they reach sexual maturity," said Pierre Brooks, who owns 33rd & Bird, a bird shop in New York City, and agreed to discuss this delicate issue with me. "For a singly kept pet bird, this can include attempts at mating with one of their toys or perches." How about the little old lady who owns 'em? "We have not come across an owner that becomes the bird's surrogate mate, but it is not unrealistic."
But is it healthy? Is it good for the bird? Is it good for Grandma?
"If this were one of our customers, we would advise the customer that the bird may be lonely and suggest introducing another parakeet for companionship. However, this may not solve the problem. Birds are similar to humans: They are selective about their mates. Simply putting a male and female bird together does not guarantee that they will like one another, let alone breed." And, as much as you may want to tell your grandmother that she's a sick fuck and she's got to stop beating off the bird, that might not be in the bird's best interest. "A bird [can] feel lonely and sexually frustrated if its mate is taken away." And, like it or not, your grandmother is Pretty Baby's mate.
Seeking a second opinion, I spoke with Jesse B., who owns Ford's Feathers in Torrance, California. "When it comes to a bird, they can be stimulated by any object. A toy, a perch. I haven't heard of anyone masturbating their parakeet before." Did he think it was wrong? "If she's doing it because the bird wants it and she wants to make the bird feel better, that might be okay. But if she's doing it for self-pleasure, or because it excites her? Then she's got a problem."
When it came to any long-term harm, Jesse agreed with Pierre. "It's not going to hurt the bird. Or your grandmother. It's good that the bird is male, though: You can induce the production of eggs in a female by stimulating her, and if they start releasing eggs, there's always the risk of the bird becoming egg-bound, basically an egg stuck in the bird's stomach, and that can kill the bird. But this is a male parakeet, so it's not a problem."
Not a problem unless, of course, you're the poor bastard who has to sit there and watch her widowed, kind, generous, conservative, religious, 78-year-old grandmother finger-fuck her parakeet. That can't be easy. But while I sympathize with your plight, PWW, I would urge you not to confront your dear ol' gran. Even if she is "doing it for self-pleasure," as Jesse worried she might be, she's probably not long for this world, and doesn't have much in her life to distract her from impending death. Why take this small pleasure, however sick and twisted, away from the old lady? Your grandma isn't hurting the bird and she's not hurting herself, and it's not like she's going to turn into a bird-molester and start jumping on pigeons in parks. Why say anything that's only going to make the old broad feel self-conscious?
So keep your mouth shut, PWW, and just pray she doesn't leave you that sicko bird in her will.