In four years I have purchased Nacho a memory-foam bed, an interactive puzzle feeder, a plush hedgehog with five distinct squeak zones, and a ball that, I want to be clear, throws itself. The total runs to several hundred dollars, a sum our cost desk would classify under discretionary spending and Nacho classifies under packaging. Here, instead, is the complete inventory of what he actually loves, assembled through years of careful observation and zero further purchases.
The sunbeam at 3 p.m.
There is a parallelogram of light that crosses our living room floor each afternoon, and Nacho tracks it with the commitment of a satellite. He relocates as it relocates. He has never missed a session. The memory-foam bed sits eighteen inches away, unoccupied, holding its resale value.
The blanket cave
Not a blanket, spread over a dog. A cave, engineered by the dog, from any textile left unattended for ninety seconds. The burrowing bureau assures me this is ancient instinct, and I believe them, because no modern force could produce the conviction with which a four-pound animal tunnels into a duvet and vanishes from the observable universe.
The bad sweatshirt
I own good clothes. Nacho sleeps exclusively on the gray sweatshirt with the paint stain and the collar that surrendered in 2023, because it smells the most like me, which is the entire and only review criterion. The ASPCA's care guidance talks about giving dogs comfort and enrichment, and I can confirm the enrichment budget can be zero dollars if your laundry discipline is poor enough.
The 6:58 p.m. patrol
Dinner is at seven. At 6:58, Nacho performs a formal circuit of the kitchen, tail at flagpole height, a ritual our love-signals correspondent would file under joyful anticipation and I file under billing. The meal itself takes eleven seconds. The parade is the point.
One specific carrot
Not carrots. A carrot, cold, whole, held while he works on the end of it like a beaver with a deadline, one of the approved items in the safe-foods ledger. Offered diced in a bowl, the same vegetable is an insult. Science, per our intelligence file, has no comment.
Supervised napping
Napping alone: acceptable, logged daily in quantities the sleep bureau would find unremarkable. Napping on a human who is trying to stand up: premium tier. The distinction matters enough that he will wake from the first kind to commute to the second.
You. Just, you.
Here is the finding the hedgehog people do not want published: the common denominator of the entire inventory is proximity to his person. The sunbeam near my desk. The sweatshirt that smells like me. The patrol that ends at my feet. Millennia of companion breeding, per the origins file, produced an animal whose luxury goods are all one commodity in different packaging. I bought the ball that throws itself. I am the ball. It took me four years and several hundred dollars to read the label, and I would call it the best money I ever wasted.


