The weird way the world works... A raccoon named "Rebecca"
11 years ago
Unless my mind plays me tricks, Rebecca Burman (http://www.furaffinity.net/view/14799977/) was named as such on a whim in some online RP intended to be a one-shot. (Well, she was named Rebecca Something Else). I might have had a flash of brilliance and somehow named her after a real raccoon, buy I doubt it.
Real raccoon? Well, the story I found online said that Calvin Coolidge (one of them presidents of the US of A) had a pet raccoon named "Rebecca".
That's a funny coincidence.
What's even funnier is - people who actually bother to read this is probably interested in my doodles, and know I have a thing for cooking vore/peril.
Yeah. Becca weren't really mean for that sort of fantasy, but nevermind, just beat with me.
Now, here's the thing: the story I read claimed that when Rebecca dies, Coolidge suggested she'd be served as Thanksgiving Dinner.
Now, farmer's sons (and Coolidge's dad was a farmer, though I rich one) often have zero problem treating an animal with affection even if they later eat it. And there are plenty of people in USA (not all of them poor, nb) that considers a raccoon a perfectly useful meat animal. The story still seems strange to me and I might have got it wrong... but a raccoon named Rebecca, who might has ended as "Thanksgiving dinner".
Things are funny sometimes.
Real raccoon? Well, the story I found online said that Calvin Coolidge (one of them presidents of the US of A) had a pet raccoon named "Rebecca".
That's a funny coincidence.
What's even funnier is - people who actually bother to read this is probably interested in my doodles, and know I have a thing for cooking vore/peril.
Yeah. Becca weren't really mean for that sort of fantasy, but nevermind, just beat with me.
Now, here's the thing: the story I read claimed that when Rebecca dies, Coolidge suggested she'd be served as Thanksgiving Dinner.
Now, farmer's sons (and Coolidge's dad was a farmer, though I rich one) often have zero problem treating an animal with affection even if they later eat it. And there are plenty of people in USA (not all of them poor, nb) that considers a raccoon a perfectly useful meat animal. The story still seems strange to me and I might have got it wrong... but a raccoon named Rebecca, who might has ended as "Thanksgiving dinner".
Things are funny sometimes.