These may be very personal questions, but they're important to ask:DylanTK wrote:I am a very introverted person, and I've always greatly benefitted from having a pet.[...]When I get home in the evenings, a human face is normally the last thing I want to see. I've been highly introverted my whole life, and not having a pet makes it feel like something is missing.
Are you naturally introverted and asocial, or do you struggle with anxiety and depression? Have you ever had a significant other or a close human friend?
Just because you feel like you don't want something, doesn't mean how you imagine it is accurate, or that you don't need it.
Plenty of people consider themselves loners and say they wouldn't want to live with another person... until they do, and they meet somebody right for them. This, in particular, can be a problem for people with high IQs and 'difficult' personalities, or who may be on the autistic spectrum or may be inclined to asexuality: yes, we are surrounded by horny obnoxious idiots. But there are intelligent, quiet, contemplative, non-obnoxious people out there who make good matches.
No matter how implausible it may seem, there's somebody out there who you would get along with well, and would provide a far better oxytocin boost and better company than a lizard. Leaning on your shoulder and quietly reading a book with you, watching a documentary, trading off on cooking meals, and with his or her own job during the day and freedom to CHOOSE to be with you rather than being locked in a cage.
Christians say God gave man free will because he wanted us to choose to love him. Comparing a pet in a cage and the love of a real human being who chose you, it's not hard to understand how they got the idea that made sense.
Certainly, over nothing at all it is a benefit. But this may be enabling your asocial behavior, and acting as a pseudo-satisfier when you would (unbeknownst to you) actually benefit much more from a partner.DylanTK wrote: It makes me happy to care for animals, and it reduces my anxiety to live with animals. The psychological benefits of keeping pets is well known.
And you could just go with a gecko and call it a day, but to do so would likely mean missing out on the opportunity to get to know and care for a real human being who would have several orders of magnitude still more awareness and reactivity.DylanTK wrote:I could just go with the giant millipede and call it a day. To do so would mean missing out on the opportunity to get to know/care for an animal that I frankly find more interesting and therefore likely more rewarding to care for due to it's level of awareness and reactivity.
Maybe you've been hurt in the past: we've all been scratched by cats and bitten by rodents at one point or another. Don't let that dictate your future.
Nor is a gecko capable of the level of awareness and cognition of a human being. If you want the best, get the best: a girlfriend/boyfriend.DylanTK wrote:An insect simply is not capable of that level of awareness/cognition.
If there's anything interfering with that, focus on overcoming that obstacle. Anxiety, depression, physical insecurity, social awkwardness, whatever.
This sounds harsh, and I don't mean it to be so. I don't think this is good for you (I don't think it's good for any human, we're social animals), and I don't think it's good for the gecko. It's enabling asocial behavior.
Even if it enables asocial behavior to humans, at least adopting a cat or dog from a shelter and saving the animal from euthanasia is good for the animal (and a lot better for the human than a lizard, due to the degree of love and engagement). Supporting commercial breeders to keep an animal in a small cage... I don't think is.
Physical pain isn't at issue; it's violation of interests, and insects do have those. Insects are sentient, "conscious" beings. Not very sentient, but none the less of some moral concern. If we can avoid unnecessary harm to them, we should.DylanTK wrote:Along those same lines, insects do not have nervous systems with nociceptors, so... No suffering, it would seem.
Oysters are different, and probably non-sentient.
You know there are human beings without the ability to feel physical pain, right? They still want to live. They could be being eaten, unaware, too.
https://youtu.be/tnABHy6tjL8?t=112
But again: What's the problem with having a bird feeder or something outside your window to attract animals? Filling it is a responsibility, and you'll have some interaction with them. Regular visitors will become accustomed to you and stop being scared. No allergy problems, since they're on the other side of glass.
If you get a house with a back yard, you could do even better and keep outside dogs. How severe are your allergies?