I am naming our dog DAD—a Shih Tzu–Poodle mix—so my child
can tell her litter of friends she has one. Many dogs are indeed DADs
even if none of them are biologically hers. We walk DAD once in the
morning and once in the evening. In summer, DAD wears shoes when
we go walking. The asphalt warms to over 118 degrees in the desert.
Monday thru Saturday, DAD barks at the mailwoman and the gig
economy’s delivery driver—his best friends in this DAD-eat-DAD
world. DAD rides shotgun when we drive our pup to school, washes
his own face and wag-tongue in wind. DAD counts trees and fire
hydrants with kiddo as they whizz on by. DAD’s bark is a fare thee well
or a wave as I unbuckle our child from the car seat. A white mom who
volunteers for drop-off tells us we cannot park here. How can that be,
I ask her, if we have indeed parked? The act of parking is happening. I’ve grown
to love technicalities. DAD always agrees with me. After all, I buy
the food. I bring home our bacon. I rub DAD’s belly if he follows my
commands, and he only does his business outside in the yard. DAD
eats dinner from a bowl on the kitchen floor. And our child feeds
DAD scraps under the table. Kiddo takes photos of her DAD for
Facebook and the ‘gram on Father’s Day: DAD slurping up clouds
of sweet, whipped cream at the shop. Our kiddo holds DAD in her lap
while she does her homework for Spanish class. Donde está el perro? We
don’t know—she has a DAD, but not a dog. She has a MOM who uses
they/them/theirs gender pronouns. We throw the kid all the best
bones. DAD speaks when we say, Speak. MOM devours all manner
of gendered shoes until they are practically non-binary—laces, buckles,
you name it.